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Western UniversityScholarship@Western
University of Western Ontario - Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository
December 2014
Beyond the Sports Page: Baseball, The CubanRevolution, and Rochester, New York Newspapers,1954-1960Evan K. NagelThe University of Western Ontario
SupervisorRobert K. BarneyThe University of Western Ontario
Follow this and additional works at: http://ir.lib.uwo.ca/etd
Part of the Sports Studies Commons
This Dissertation/Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Scholarship@Western. It has been accepted for inclusion in University ofWestern Ontario - Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository by an authorized administrator of Scholarship@Western. For more information,please contact [email protected].
Recommended CitationNagel, Evan K., "Beyond the Sports Page: Baseball, The Cuban Revolution, and Rochester, New York Newspapers, 1954-1960"(2014). University of Western Ontario - Electronic Thesis and Dissertation Repository. Paper 2564.
BEYOND THE SPORTS PAGE: BASEBALL, THE CUBAN REVOLUTION, AND ROCHESTER, NEW YORK NEWSPAPERS, 1954- 1960
Monograph
by
Evan Nagel
Graduate Program in Faculty of Health Sciences: School of Kinesology
A Thesis Submitted in Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Masters of Arts The School of Graduate and Postdoctoral Studies The University of Western Ontario London, Ontario, Canada © Evan Nagel 2015
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Table of Contents
Abstract…………………………………………………………….........ii
Glossary of Frequently Used Terms……………………………………iii Acknowledgements……………………………………………………..iv Chapter 1: From the Straits to the Lake…………………………………1 Chapter 2: ‘Nocout’ on a Walkoff……………………………………..25 Chapter 3: Just One More Step………………………………………...43 Chapter 4: Off the Cuban Cuff…………………………………………90 Chapter 5: Diplomatic Footnote: A Conclusion……………………...154 Bibliography………………………………………………………….162
Curriculum Vitae……………………………………………………..165
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Abstract
In the 1950s, the Caribbean island of Cuba underwent a series of emphatic and
revolutionary changes, culminating in Fidel Castro's regime coming to power in early 1959. A
year later, relations between the Cuban government and their American counterpart had
deteriorated rapidly to the point of rhetoric, economic sanctions, and covert military actions. Yet,
both nations laid claim to the same national pastime: the sport of baseball. Since the 1860s,
America's game of choice had been played passionately by Cubans, helping facilitate their social
assimilation into the U.S. economic sphere. There was arguably a cultural sporting bridge
between the two nations, and during the Cuban Revolution this relationship was arguably at its
most important stage. In fact, the Havana Sugar Kings played in the highest tier of minor league
baseball, the International League, from 1954 to 1960. By examining local newspapers from
Rochester, New York, another IL city, this study portrays how this shared pastime impacted
American front section media coverage about their southern island neighbor during the Cuban
Revolution.
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Frequently Used Terms Page
IL-International League
D & C- Democrat and Chronicle
T-U- Rochester Times-Union
MLB- Major League Baseball
NLB-Negro League Baseball
OB- Organized Baseball
CWL-Cuban Winter League
AP- Associated Press
UPI-United Press International
FIL-Florida International League
M-26-7- 26th of July Movement.
DR- Directorio Revolucionario
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Acknowledgements I would like to thank:
• Kathy and Roman Lesiv for housing me during several research expeditions.
• Jacqui Saunders for helping organize my defense and for not charging me everytime I
locked myself out of my office.
• Kaeli Wolf and Tami Enlow for always being there when I needed someone to talk to
• Dr. Kevin Wamsley for giving me a second chance, serving on my thesis committee, and
for giving constructive criticism that helped me immensely.
• Stacey Lorenz for mentoring me during my undergraduate years and for lighting the
spark that drove me to Western.
• Dr. Ken Kirkwood and Dr. Andrés Pérez for serving on my thesis examination board.
• Erin Fray for being a great friend and colleague.
• The staff at D.B. Weldon Library and RACER for all their help with obtaining resources
and forgiving late fees.
• The staff at Rundel Memorial Library in Rochester, New York for the workspace and for
allowing me “just five more minutes” after closing hours to finish collecting data.
• Jesse Morse for taking time out of his schedule to help me scan microfilm when my
flashdrive erased days of research.
• My aunt Delane Richardson and cousin Hayley Benz for housing me over the summer,
and teaching me there is nothing stronger than the bond of family.
• My parents Geoff and Sharon Nagel whom without I would not be here typing these
words. Their love, funding, patience, and support has truly blessed my life.
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Chapter 1
From the Straits to the Lake1 “The Cubans were such a slick and speedy ball club, and so colorful . . . but I guessed they were just a little too hot-blooded, as a people, to play in the International League . . . O those crazy Cubans!”- Howard Senzel2
Introduction
When you look at Rochester, New York on a map, it seems about as far from the tropical
Caribbean and Castro’s unique brand of communism as one can get. I should know, I was born
there. Januarys of bitter cold, the wind whipping in off Lake Ontario, a collection of upper
middle class suburbs surrounding a large capitalist metropolitan area where votes carry more
weight than the punch of an AK-47, Rochester, Havana is clearly not. But, in the 1950s these
two communities were linked to one another through the All-American institution of Triple AAA
baseball. The Rochester Red Wings have a long and extensive history with the sport. The city’s
professional diamond legacy itself dates back to 1886 and the founding of the International
League (hereafter referred to as IL) and the Rochester Maroons.3 In addition, baseball has been
1 The Straits of Florida is a body of water which seperates Cuba from the mainland United States. Lake Ontario
seperates Southern Ontario from Western New York. 2 Howard Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War: Being a Soliloquy on the Necessity of Baseball (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977). Senzel, a graduate of Brighton High School (my alma mater), was an avid Rochester Red Wings fan during the time period of this study. After graduating from college, he returned to his hometown searching for why those “Crazy Cubans” were forcibly removed from the International League, and rediscovering the role baseball played in his childhood along the way. 3 Jim Mandelaro and Scott Pitoniak, Silver Seasons and a New Frontier: The Story of the Rochester Red Wings (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 2010). Other minor league teams Rochester fielded between 1886 and 1928 (many times it was the same franchise under a different name) include: the Jingoes, Broncos, Hop Bitters, Flour Cities, Browns, Blackbirds, Brownies, Patriots, Bronchos, Hustlers, Colts, and Tribe.
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well documented in Cuba, both historically and sociologically, in the national narrative since the
19th century, including the IL Havana Sugar Kings, whose brief existence began in 1954.4
Both cities, Rochester and Havana, shared the IL spotlight together from 1954-1960.
Frequently, baseball reporters from both Flower City (Rochester’s nickname) dailies, The
Democrat & Chronicle and the Rochester Times-Union, made the trip south to the Cuban capital
to cover games between their hometown Red Wings and Havana’s Sugar Kings. However, AAA
baseball was not the extent of newsworthy events in Havana. From 1953-1959 revolutionaries of
the 26th of July movement under the command of Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz, waged a campaign
across Cuba. Needless to say, the paths of rebellion and baseball aligned before the eyes of beat-
writers George Beahon and Al C. Weber, and on the front pages of their respective newspapers.
The cross-hairs of a lens embellishing baseball and a revolution featured outside the sporting
pages is the examination herein pursued.
From 1954 to 1960 the IL “truly” featured international baseball. During that period,
franchises located in three countries were members: the United States, Canada, and Cuba. The
Havana Sugar Kings, formed during American-patronized President Fulgencio Batista’s reign,
were an anomaly in the history of baseball. Though affiliated with American professional clubs
and featuring numerous American players, the franchise, for all intents and purposes, was a
Cuban production. The club, padded with Cuban baseball veterans such as Rafael Noble and
Angel Scull, was owned by Havana businessman Roberto “Bobby” Maduro. The nation’s
leaders treated the Sugar Kings with great deference. For instance, Batista kept the “Cuban
Mafia” from extorting money from the club. Later, Fidel Castro’s communist regime allowed
4 Roberto Gonzalez Echevarría, The Pride of Havana: A History of Cuban Baseball (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999). The island had been a scouting outpost for the Washington Senators Major League Baseball franchise since the turn of the 20th century. The Sugar Kings were also not the first “organized baseball” franchise in the capital city, the Havana Cubans of the Class C Florida International League, existed from 1946 through 1953.
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Maduro to remain in operation even though many American enterprises were seized and
“nationalized” by the Revolutionary government.5 Castro, an avid baseball fan and
mythologized former player, allocated funds for games to be broadcast on the national radio
station as one measure to keep the Kings financially stable. However, in midsummer of 1960,
the team departed Cuba and moved to Jersey City, New Jersey due to increasing pressure from
the other IL club owners. Even though Havana won the 1959 league title over Minneapolis,
AAA baseball under a Caribbean sun had set.6
Purpose of the Study
This study examines how Rochester’s local newspaper coverage of minor league baseball
factored into its overall portrayal of the Cuban Revolution. By examining the archives of the
Democrat & Chronicle (hereafter referred to as D & C) and the Rochester Times-Union
(hereafter referred to as T-U), I address the following question:
Was the local newspaper reporting sympathetic or critical of Cuba’s move towards Castro
and eventual communism, and how did baseball coverage factor into this reporting outside of the
sports section?
Literature Review
The concept of baseball serving as a cultural Bridge between the American “North” and
the “Pearl of the Antilles” has arguably been present ever since the game was brought to Cuba by
“university students returning from the United States sometime in 1865 or 1866.”7 This alleged
transnational sporting dynamic is examined more thoroughly in the study proper, specifically in 5 However, Batista did not spend any money on the club himself.
6 Roberto Gonzalez Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2010); Rory Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro, http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/c34ce106 7 Thomas F. Carter, The Quality of Home Runs: The Passion, Politics, and Language of Cuban Baseball (Durham: Duke University Press, 2008).
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Chapter 2. However, a brief chronological introduction to its presence is necessary to understand
the information and arguments it precedes. In addition it will help to establish how intrinsically
intertwined the two countries’ cultures are, especially via America’s pastime.
As Louis Pérez Jr.’s excellent magnum opus On Becoming Cuban poses: “There has
always been a temptation to address these issues (the Cuban-North American connection)
separately in monographic form . . . Protestant missionaries, or tourism, or baseball and boxing .
. . But such an approach seemed incapable of yielding the desired outcome: names, to
understand the context and complexity of these linkages as a totality, as a system.”8 To attempt a
study, especially from the Cuban viewpoint on a singular issue of this complex transnational
relationship, fails to provide readers with the tools to understand the “totality” of this dynamic.
Pérez Jr. feels that the “objective is to examine the relationship between . . . baseball and national
identity, Protestant missionaries and revolution . . . how, in short, these and other factors
contributed to arranging the terms by which nationality in Cuba assumed a distinctive form.”9
Based on this insightful assumption, my background section attempts to convey some of that
cohesive whole or “strands of a web.” However, it focuses on baseball’s role with a few of the
other “strands” as I do not want to stray too far off topic. Also, no pun intended, but by
condensing 579 pages into 8, important details may be lost in the translation.
While the history of pre-revolutionary baseball on the island (1860s-1959) is extensive
and detailed in both English and Spanish, there are, for this study’s purposes, three distinct time
periods to be covered. I briefly examine the first two here and the third extensively later in its
own separate chapter. The first such period spans from the arrival of baseball to Cuba’s shores
in the mid-1860s to the end of the Spanish-American War in 1898. As several Cuban historians,
8 Louis A. Peréz Jr., On Becoming Cuban: Identity, Nationality, and Culture (Chapel Hill: University of North
Carolina Press, 1999), 5. Parenthesis mine. 9 Ibid.
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sporting and otherwise, have attested, baseball became embedded in the local populace partially
because it represented America or the concept of a “modern” nation. Pérez states: “But it was
baseball that took hold most firmly. Cubans were introduced to sport at a critical moment in the
formation of national identity, assembling the elements on which to base a separate
nationality.”10 Until the late 1860s, coinciding with baseball’s Antilles importation, Pérez
argued that a Cuban nationalism for all intents and purposes did not exist, though with help from
American economic and cultural influence it had begun to take shape as early as 1819. This
began to change as an increasing reliance on the United States for trade and tourism through
much of the 1800s diluted dependence on both Spain and the colonial system as a whole.11
At the close of the American Civil War, the strong economic and cultural relationship
between the island and the “North” exploded, causing an irreparable economic rift with
motherland Spain. More and more “Cubanos” realized that what benefited the Spanish crown
went against their own best interests. Cuba, and by extension America, represented modernity;
Spain illustrated backwards barbarism: “This . . . is not a war between Cubans and Spaniards, but
between the past and the future, between a spirit that renovates and another that petrifies.”12
Pérez records an account of a narrator who later commented: “And he naturally desired that this
great civilization (United States) be channeled to Cuba, that Cuba would be free to introduce
these customs.”13 As such, it was no surprise that the majority of rapidly-increasing Cuban
independence movements received their funding and cultural philosophies from the United
States.14
10
Ibid., 75. 11
Ibid., 17-24. 12
Ibid., 86-87. 13
Ibid., 85. Parenthesis mine. 14
Ibid., 89-95
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During the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s, “the growing popularity of baseball in the United
States coincided with years of mass (Cuban) immigration. Cubans could not ignore the sport that
had captured the imagination of the North American public.”15 In fact, Thomas J. Carter quotes
famed Cuban freedom fighter José Martí Pérez, who, while exiled in New York City, espoused:
“In every neighbourhood there is a baseball game.”16 Just as baseball popularity drastically
increased in the 1860s and 1870s in the United States, a similar wave struck Cuba with the
arrival of returning students and hopeful revolutionaries such as Martí.17
Baseball spread rapidly from Havana to the eastern rural provinces, with almost every
town having at least one team. In fact, at least 200 teams are confirmed to have been formed
during the 1880s. Six thousand fans attended the national championship in 1886, though this
figure dropped slightly to four thousand two years later. American clubs also began
barnstorming tours around the island in the 1880s. The Rochester (New York) Hop Bitters were
the first such “Yanqui” team. In 1881 they arrived in Havana to play a series of exhibition
contests against the soon to be legendary Almendares of the Cuban Winter League.18 Major
League Baseball teams soon followed, most notably the Philadelphia Athletics in 1886 and the
New York Giants in 1890. In 1887, the Cuban Giants, a Negro club with no Latinos on its roster,
toured the island.19 Just 12 years later, Cuba began barnstorming campaigns of its own, when
Abel Linares led the All-Cubans on a tour of the northeastern United States. 20
Several Cuban historians theorize that one of the major reasons baseball latched onto the
national consciousness during this time was the simple fact that it was not Spanish in origin.
15
Ibid., 75. 16
Carter, The Quality of Home Runs, 49-50. 17
Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 76-78. 18
Ibid., 76. 19
Adrian Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the Color Line (Berkley, University of California Press, 2007), 46-51. 20
Ibid., 81-82.
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With at least two violent rebellions already a part of its history, Cubans’ desire to remove the
Spanish crown from their heads only seemed to increase as the 1890s wore on. Baseball was
often used to instill the spirit of revolution, both in actuality and in the imagination of the
Spanish occupation forces.21 The Cuban exile community in Tampa, Florida held several charity
baseball tournaments to raise funds for various revolutionary organizations on the island.22 Even
the American barnstorming teams got into the act, sometimes inadvertently. During the Hop
Bitters 1881 tour, American flags the team had brought to pass out to spectators were confiscated
by Spanish authorities, worried that “it would encourage the Cubans to rebellion.” 23
In 1895, the Cuban War for Independence broke out, and, almost immediately, Spanish
authorities passed various ordinances banning baseball across the island, but that did not keep it
from being played or from being used in revolutionary propaganda. Even though the rebellion
was crushed in 1898, almost immediately afterwards the Spanish-American War began with the
mysterious destruction of the USS Maine berthed in Havana. In total, 260 American sailors
perished, including all but one member of the Maine’s baseball team, “The crack club of the
fleet.” Barnstorming tours from both nations briefly stopped while the conflict raged in Cuba.
Several months later, under the banner of “Cuba Libre,” American forces emerged victorious
over the Spanish. America’s “game” and its armed forces had won over the Cuban people, but
as the just “liberated” islanders soon realized, they had simply traded one imperial regime for
another, and this would reflect itself in future transnational baseball exchanges.24
If the 1860s-1900s represent a period of Cubans embracing American ideals, the 1920s-
1940s represent a period of Americans disregarding the separate nature of Cuban national
21
Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 81-83. 22
Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 83-84. Most of these were sponsored by the owners of local cigar factories. 23
Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 31. 24Robert Elias, The Empire Strikes Out: How Baseball Sold U.S. Foreign Policy and Promoted the American Way Abroad (New York: New Press, 2010), 37-38.
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character. The period in between, 1900-1920, was by no means unimportant in terms of
American-Cuban baseball relations. Barnstorming on both sides of the Florida Straits continued
at a furious pace during this period. Negro and Major league clubs frequently toured the island,
most notably Ty Cobb and the Detroit Tigers in 1909.25 It was during these American tours
Miguel Ángel González were discovered by scouts. This first notable example of Cubans being
exported to the American majors only increased the cultural baseball marker between the two
nations.26 In addition to this exportation, Cuban clubs, mainly under the guidance of the
aforementioned Linares, continued to tour Florida and the northeastern states during the period.
Of particular note were the 1913 Long Branch Cubans, a squad composed entirely of Cuban
players who played in the Class D New York-New Jersey League.27 However, what happened
during this period pales in comparison to what began in 1919 with the passage of the Volstead
Act, more commonly known as Prohibition. 28
As Roberto Gonzàlez Echevarría points out in his history of Cuban baseball, The Pride of
Havana, American and Canadian tourism had already begun to steadily increase to the island
from 1914-1918, due to the ongoing war which made European vacation travel disappear. But
this tourism was usually restricted to the American “elite of elites.” Much of what could be
found in Havana, could just as easily be found ninety miles north in Miami, Florida.29 This
changed in 1919 with the passage of the Volstead Act, which added the 18th Amendment to the
American Constitution. From 1920 until its repeal via the 21st Amendment, signed into law by
25
Roberto Gonzalez Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 135-136. 26
Samuel O. Regalado, “The Latin Quarter in the Major Leagues: Adjustment and Achievement,” in The American Game: Baseball and Ethnicity ed: Lawrence Baldassaro and Richard A. Johnson (Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press, 2002), 164-166. 27 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 94. 28 Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 167-169. 29 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 163-164.
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President Franklin Delano Roosevelt in 1932, the production, transportation, and sale of
“intoxicating liquors” was illegal within the borders of the United States.30
American tourists flooded Havana almost overnight, and a city already heavily influenced
by the United States was now consumed by the bigger nation’s cultural sphere. With liquor still
legal under Cuban law, along with other vices such as gambling and prostitution, upper and
middle class Americans vacationed frequently to the island during the 1920s and early 1930s.31
Pérez’s research concluded that between 1920 and 1940 over two million Americans travelled to
Cuba at least once, showing that the island’s tourism industry was “driven by North American
tastes and preferences.”32 With over 7,000 bars and taverns located in Havana by the end of the
1920s, along with numerous American-owned-and-operated hotels, the city placed tourists
comfort above a Cuban cultural survival.33 As Adolphe Roberts commented: “He (an American
tourist) will be helped in argument or fight by a tourist policeman who will generally give the
short end to the Cuban involved.”34 This newly established social hierarchy with the American
vacationers at the top lasted until 1960, until the triumph of the Cuban Revolution and the ouster
of capitalism. This change in the American-Cuban social dynamic also affected the transnational
baseball exchange in many ways, including three representative themes of this study.
The first theme is the concept of Cuba, particularly Havana, being considered by
Americans as a foreign extension of the United States. Marketed as: “So close to home and yet
so foreign,” both the familiar and exotic elements of the island were constantly promoted by the
American media, and on some occasions by the United States government.35 This message was
30 Michael A. Lerner, Dry Manhattan: Prohibition in New York City (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2009). 31
Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 168-174. 32 Ibid., 167-168. 33 Ibid., 169. 34
Ibid., 188. 35
Ibid., 172-218.
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widely read and viewed by American baseball fans during the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s. While
“Yanqui” spectators at Cuban League contests never represented a significant draw to Havana
promoters, even during Prohibition, the exotic qualities of the island were heavily promoted by
teams touring the United States. 36 At the turn of the 20th century, Negro squads sometimes
added the moniker of Cuban to their team names in order to convey a sense of exoticness.37
The Abel Linares Cuban Stars continued their American barnstorming tours, staging one
every year from 1908 until 1930.38 Noting the drawing power of the island to baseball fans,
Cuban-American businessman Alejandro “Alex” Pompez formed his own Cuban Stars, with
plans to tour the United States in 1916. During the 1920s, both Stars organizations competed in
rival Negro Leagues in America, officially becoming a part of the African-American baseball
scene.39 After the Linares club folded in the mid-1920s, Pompez permanently located his squad
in the New York City neighborhood of Harlem, rebranding them in 1935 as the New York
Cubans.40 In their intial season, the New York club consisted solely of Cubans and other dark-
skinned Latinos but, by the 1930s and 1940s, half of their roster was African American.
Representing a rare combined effort in the American-Cuban baseball exchange, they competed
in the Negro League World Series on two occasions, in fact, winning in 1947.41
The second theme is the increasing attachment to the Cuban leagues by the American
Major Leagues, collectively known as Organized Baseball. As part of the Roaring 20s tourism
boom in Cuba, many white American ballplayers began joining island clubs during the winter
season as a way to supplement their incomes.42 Not only did this exchange increase “Yanqui”
36
Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 88-92. 37 Ibid., 65-67. 38
Ibid., 106-118. 39 Ibid., 116-117. 40
Ibid., 126. 41
Ibid., 189. 42
Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 171-173.
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stereotyping and social Americanization of Havana, but it also forced Organized Baseball by the
1940s to be further involved with the Cuban leagues. The major leagues, essentially via their
monopoly, forcibly implemented rules to make sure Cuban clubs compensated their American
counterparts for use of their players during the northern nation’s off-season.43 This
compensation did not extend both ways.
Despite the unwritten yet readily enforced “color barrier” which effectively barred
African Americans from participating in Organized Baseball, in the 1920s several light-skinned
Cubans such as Adolfo Luque and Miguel Gonzàlez tested the limits of the color line.44 By the
1930s, Cuban ballplayers began to seem less an anomaly and more an inexpensive force of labor,
compared to white Americans.45 When US ball-clubs signed a Cuban player, his former team
received minimal compensation, if any at all. In the eyes of American organized baseball, Cuba
was just another part of its baseball empire, just like the island nation was essentially an
extension of the United States.46 This dynamic will be further examined at the beginning of
Chapter 3, especially with regard to the likes of Clark Griffith, long-time owner of the
Washington Senators during the 1930s, and Gabe Paul, general manager of the Cincinnati Reds
in the 1950s.47
The third and final theme relates to an increasing interest and devotion held by Cubans
towards following American major league baseball. The Cuban circuits, both the amateurs of the
sugar mill clubs and the professionals of the Winter League, never lacked local support.
43 Ibid., 46-48. This was a secondary reason for driving Organized Baseball towards Cuba. The main reason was businessman Jorge Pasquel’s Mexican League signing or “stealing” many American players from the majors in the late 1940s. 44
Samuel O. Regalado, “The Latin Quarter in the Major Leagues: Adjustment and Achievement,” 164-166. 45
Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 151-153. 46
Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 48-51. 47
Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 151, 214-216. Paul is not mentioned by Burgos by name but he was the general manager of the Reds during their years as major league affiliate of the Havana Sugar Kings, which features briefly in his book.
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However, the increasing presence of Organized Baseball on the island, according to Pérez,
naturally increased its fan base towards enveloping a majority of Cubans, particularly in Havana.
The Cincinnati Reds developed a sizable fan following in the 1920s due to the exploits of
Luque.48 The now anglicized “Mike” Àngel Gonzàlez, as well became a national hero by briefly
coaching the infamous “Gas House Gang” St. Louis Cardinals in 1938.49 Pérez points out that:
“From the conservative Diario de la Marina to the communist daily Hoy, papers (were) filled
with news about the major leagues, including AP and UPI wire stories of the previous day’s
games.”50 In fact in several instances, American baseball seemed to be considered of more
importance than news regarding the volatile Cuban political scene.
As Pérez quoted journalist Mariblanca Sabas Aloma in 1932 during the violent reign of
President Gerardo Machado: “Five assassinations right here in the capital that have not in the
slightest diminished the extraordinary enthusiasm of the Cuban fans. Days that should be given
to mourning have been spent by the radio that is transmitting the World Series.”51 And,
according to Robert Elias, after a weeklong 1933 communications blackout following Fulgencio
Batista’s first coup d’etat: “Cubans wanted-before all else-to know the American baseball scores
they had missed.”52 That is how hooked on baseball, especially that of the American major
leagues, many Cubans were. It was this island cultural scene that formed the stage for the
arrival of the Havana Cubans in 1947, as well as their successors, the Cuban/Havana Sugar
Kings in 1954.53
Exploring the shared baseball relationship between Cuba and the United States is by no
means a rare or untapped field of academic research. Histories of the sport in the Cuban context 48
Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban: Identity, Nationality, and Culture, 260-261. 49
Echevarría, The Pride of Havana: A History of Cuban Baseball, 8, 19. 50
Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 261. Parenthesis mine. 51
Ibid., 263-265. 52 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out, 108. 53
Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 259-260.
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abound, most notably Pride of Havana by Roberto Echevarría,54 and Peter C. Bjarkman’s A
History of Cuban Baseball,55 two extensively-researched narrative accounts. Sociological
examinations on baseball and sport in Cuban culture include: Milton H. Jamail’s Full Count:
Inside Cuban Baseball,56 Pettavinno and Pye’s Sport in Cuba: The Diamond in the Rough,57 and
arguably the most informative, The Quality of Home Runs: The Passion, Politics, and Language
of Cuban Baseball by Thomas F. Carter. The latter is a sociological study of Cuban national
identity through baseball, or “Cubanidad.” Carter concludes that: “Baseball is a definitive Cuban
spectacle.”58 Writings about baseball’s role within American imperialism, with substantial focus
on Cuba, are not unheard of in academic circles. Such works include Robert Elias’s The Empire
Strikes Out,59 The Nationalist Pastime by Russ Crawford,60 and Gerald R. Gems’s Sport,
Colonialism, and the United States.61 All three contain examples of how the structure of
organized baseball throughout the Caribbean was inextricably linked to the American
government’s political agenda.
Examinations of baseball and America’s national identity are prolific. Most of the
compiled essays within The American Game: Baseball and Ethnicity examine the theme to
greater or lesser extents. The Lawrence Baldassaro-authored introduction surmised that:
“baseball history mirrors the larger patterns of American life.” 62 A similar trend is found in
many of the journal articles compiled in The Politics of Baseball. The editor Ron Briley noted:
54 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana. 55 Peter C. Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006 (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2007). 56 Milton H. Jamail, Full Count: Inside Cuban Baseball (Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press, 2000). 57 Paula J. Pettavino and Geralyn Pye, Sport in Cuba: The Diamond in the Rough (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1994). 58 Carter, The Quality of Home Runs. 59 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out. 60 Russ Crawford, “ The Nationalist Pastime: The Use of Baseball to Promote Nationalism Globally,” in The Politics of Baseball: Essays on the Pastime and Power at Home and Abroad, (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2010). 61 Gerald R. Gems, “Sport, Colonialism, and United States Imperialism,” Journal of Sports History, Vol. 33, No. 1 (2006): 3-25. 62 Baldassaro, Johnson, editors, The American Game: Baseball and Ethnicity, 5.
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“the national pastime was a reflection of and not an escape from the American political scene.”63
David Q. Voight’s Reflections on Diamonds, Baseball and American Culture proclaims
fascination at the ability of “baseball research to reveal fresh insight into American culture and
our national character.”64 The first episode of Ken Burns’s landmark eleven-part documentary
mini-series Baseball makes this narrative its central focus.65
The crossing of American and Cuban baseball nationalism has been covered to a brief
extent. The 1999 two game exhibition series between Cuba’s national team and Major League
Baseball’s Baltimore Orioles featured heavily in The Quality of Home Runs.66 By far the most
relevant examination of this international sporting relationship to my study is Baseball and the
Cold War: Being a Soliloquy on the Necessity of Baseball by Howard M. Senzel, which
specifically referenced the potential bonding agent of the Havana Sugar Kings to American
baseball fans in his hometown of Rochester, New York.67
At first glance, Senzel’s 1977 book seemingly renders my research proposal redundant.
He analyzed the archives of the D & C from 1954-1960, specifically trying to discover what
happened on the night of July 26, 1959, and how the Rochester community and federal
government reacted to the incident. However there are several major problems with attempting
to classify Baseball and the Cold War as an academic source.
Despite the fact that at least one source, The Empire Strikes Out,68 used Senzel’s work to
support its main argument, his credibility comes into question. First there are no endnotes,
footnotes, bibliography, index, or literature citations in his work. In the book proper, Senzel
63 Ron Briley, editor, The Politics of Baseball: Essays on the Pastime and Power at Home and Abroad (Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2010), 2. 64 David Q. Voight, Reflections on Diamonds: American Baseball and American Culture, speech at the 1st annual Convention for North American Society for Sports History, Columbus, OH, May 25-26, 1973. 65 Baseball: Our Game. Director Ken Burns. Narrator. John Chancellor. PBS,1994,Netflix. 66 Carter, The Quality of Home Run, 89-110. 67 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War. 68 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out, 196.
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does list article headlines along with the date published, but for this study that is not enough.
Also he only looks at the D & C, leaving the Times-Union unanalyzed. Furthermore, he does not
attempt to tie this into any existing academic theories, nor does he reference relevant literature,
or any literature for that matter. Finally, and most importantly to my study, Baseball and the
Cold War has information gaps prevalent throughout regarding Senzel’s research methods,
which could potentially mislead the reader. For example, he proclaimed: “I had read through the
entire 1957 season and there was never any mention of rebel scares affecting the attendance at
baseball games.”69 And yet, 1957 reports from D & C columnist George Beahon referenced at
least three separate examples: “Rebel propaganda designed to keep tourists out of Havana and
natives off the streets;”70 “Wings Get Warning Letters from Cuban Rebels;”71 and “Rebel
Bombings and Censorship.”72 For these reasons, Senzel’s work, arguably the premier example
for this topic, can by no means be considered an academic source. This realization supports the
necessity for this study to have been undertaken.
There are three gaps pertinent to the remaining secondary literature examined that give
this thesis significant purpose. The first major gap is the time period questioned: The Cuban
Revolution, 1953-1960. While the Cuban Revolution is hardly unexplored territory (My Life,73
That Infernal Little Cuban Republic,74 The Cuban Insurrection,75 Contesting Castro,76 Making
69 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 44. 70 George Beahon, “Red Wings Divide with Havana, as Clark Wallops Grand Slam in 2d,” Democrat & Chronicle, 31 July 1957. 71 George Beahon, “Wings Get Warning Letters from Cuban Rebels,” Democrat & Chronicle, 6 August 1957. 72 George Beahon, “What is the Real Situation in Cuba?,” Democrat & Chronicle, 11 August 1957. This story ran as the headline on the front page of the newspaper. 73 Fidel Castro with Ignacio Ramonet, My Life (London: Simon & Schuster Export, 2007). Despite the constant declaration from academics of Castro being a baseball fan, the Cuban leader mentions the game only twice in his 711 page autobiography. The Sugar Kings, or even the Cuban National League are not mentioned. 74 Lars Schoultz, That Infernal Little Cuban Republic (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009). 75 Ramon L. Bonachea and Marta San Martin, The Cuban Insurrection: 1952-1959 (New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1974).
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State Action Possible,77 The United States and Batista78), the role baseball played in the said
relationship is sorely unappreciated, much less explored. The three sources which can be
described as making some contribution to this theme are either non-academic,79 focus soley on
the baseball itself,80 or are personal recollections of a local Cuban fan.81
Most of the literature dedicated to the US-Cuban relationship via baseball focuses on
either the pre-revolution period (The Pride of Havana,82 Sport and Colonialism83) or more
frequently the post-revolution period (History of Cuban Baseball,84 Full Count,85 Quality of
Home Runs,86 and 1970’s Baseball Diplomacy87). Arguably, the most important moment
between the United States and Cuba, and the most visible cultural link during the Revolution, has
remained primarily unexamined. This is the central literature gap that this study attempts to
address.
The second academic gap centers upon a lack of variety in American communities
examined. Much of the relevant literature, with limited examples via sports, focuses primarily
76 Thomas G. Paterson, Contesting Castro: The United States and the Triumph of the Cuban Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994). It briefly mentions the Sugar Kings as being a symbolic part of American-Cuban international relations. 77 Jutta Weldes and Diana Saco, “Making State Action Possible: The United States and the Discursive Construction of the ‘The Cuban Problem’, 1960-1994,” Millennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 25, No. 2 (1996): 361-395. 78 Hugh Thomas, “Cuba: The United States and Batista, 1952-1958,” World Affairs, Vol. 149, No. 4 (1987), 169-175. 79 Howard Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War. 80 Kyle T. Doherty, “The Cause of Baseball: Baseball and Nation-Building in Revolutionary Cuba,” Nine: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, Vol. 21, No. 1, (2012): 53-68. 81 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas. Echevarría, a Cuban native, spent much of his young adult life playing and following baseball in Havana. While this soure is academic in its approach, he was too personal and brief with his findings. 82 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana. 83 Gerald R. Gems, “Sport, Colonialism, and United States Imperialism,” Journal of Sports History, Vol. 33, No. 1 (2006): 3-25. 84 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006. 85 Jamail, Full Count. 86 Carter, The Quality of Home Runs. 87 Justin W.R. Turner, “1970’s Baseball Diplomacy between Cuba and the United States,” Nine: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, Vol. 19, No. 1 (2010), 67-84.
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on Southern Florida,88 or cities with large Cuban populations.89 Senzel’s Baseball and the Cold
War is the only attempt at discourse aimed at a metropolitan area lacking a substantial Cuban
contingent: Rochester, New York.90 The one reason why American cities such as Miami,
Tampa, or New York City are written about is precisely because of the prominent Cuban
communities they each embrace.91
However, due to the time period of this study, finding out how such an important
political event was received, in an area far removed from the conflict, ie average America, is
clearly worthy of academic exploration. How did Rochester, New York, a city without a “Little
Havana”92 or “Miami Mafia”93 interpret the Cuban Revolution? Unlike other American cities,
Rochester had a visible window into the Cuban cultural sphere, perfect for the study undertaken
here. A secondary goal of this study is to see if that connection of playing in the same
professional baseball league was enough to have any sort of impact on the reception an
American community held towards the Cuban Revolution.
The final gap featured specifically regards the Havana Sugar Kings franchise. Aside
from Baseball and the Cold War,94 Bobby Maduro,95 and a chapter in Roberto Echevarría’s
Cuban Fiestas, 96 most relevant sources relegate the franchise to footnotes, and sadly, sometimes
incorrect footnotes. The next closest in detail to the aforementioned three, When a Dream Plays
Reality in Baseball: Roberto Maduro and the Inter-American League by John Cronin, incorrectly
88 Andrew Lynch, “Expressions of Cultural Standing in Miami: Cuban Spanish Discourse about Fidel Castro and Cuba,” Revista Internacional de Lenguistica Iberoamericana, Vol. 7, No. 2 (2009): 21-48. 89 Andrea O’Reilly Herrera, editor, Cuba: Idea of a Nation Displaced (Albany: SUNY Press, 2008). 90 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War. 91 Herrera, editor, Cuba: Idea of a Nation Displaced. 92 Ibid. 93 Castro with Ignacio Ramonet, My Life. Castro constantly refers to the Cuban community in Southern Florida as the “Miami Mafia.” 94 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War. 95 Rory Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro, http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/c34ce106. 96 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas.
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referred to the club as the Havana Sugar Canes.97 The Pride of Havana, also written by
Echevarría, does focus on the IL franchise for six pages, however he neglects to mention the
Verdi shooting incident at all.98 Bjarkman relegates the franchise to less than four pages in his
pre-revolutionary chapter, and another four separate pages on the shooting incident.99 I find this
lack of research, and in some cases, incorrect information cited, quite baffling. How is it that a
franchise that not only was the highest tier-ranked professional team in the history of Cuba,
played in the highest-ranked minor league in North America, was the top farm club for the Major
League Baseball Cincinnati Reds, whose lifespan ran almost parallel to the Cuban Revolution
itself, that Castro went against his ideological position to preserve, has so little written about
it?100
During Castro’s first visit to Canada as the leader of Cuba, he was scheduled to throw out
the first pitch at a Sugar Kings’ contest against the baseball rendition of Toronto’s Maple
Leafs.101 The famous picture of Castro in his Barbudos (Bearded Ones) baseball jersey was
taken before a Havana-Rochester game: a contest that would mark the prelude to the franchise’s
eventual departure for New Jersey. During their first IL campaign in 1954, a conga band
followed them on every road trip.102 Their lifespan is so quirky and so interesting that one could
imagine several academic articles being written on this franchise on a variety of topics, adding
much to the literature of sports history. Yet, within the works available in English, they remain
footnotes of history. This study attempts to rectify the disproportionate situation.
97 John Cronin, Society for American Baseball Research: When a Dream Plays Reality in Baseball: Roberto Maduro and the Inter-American League, http://sabr.org/research/-when-dream-plays-reality-baseball-roberto-maduro-and-inter-american-league. 98 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana: A History of Cuban Baseball: 336-342. 99 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 98, 307. 100 Rory Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro, http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/c34ce106. 101 “Cubans Going for Broke but Castro will Pitch,” Toronto Daily Star, 22 April 1959. With Castro eventually unable to attend the game, Cuban National Director for Sport, Captain Felipe Guerra threw out the first pitch. 102 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War.
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Methodology
It occurs to me that an explanation of the “main title” of my thesis is necessary at this
point. I have not adopted the phrase “Beyond the Sport Pages” without design. The thrust of my
thesis examines editorial comment, analysis, public reaction, perception, opinion, and stance,
each an approach that is not commonly highly profiled on sports pages. Because baseball is a
major theme of the thesis, one would normally think that the sports pages would be the primary
newspaper section of investigation. But, the above-listed factors of examination are not often
embedded in material found on the sports page, where, generally, upcoming sporting events and
their results are reported in detail but little else appears in the way of superimposing a sporting
theme on greater social or world events, and hence, the quest to look “beyond the sports page”
for the primary sources of data.
Starting with Havana’s IL entry in 1954 and ending with its forced 1960 departure, I
examined microfilm scans of the two daily newspapers: Rochester, New York’s Democrat &
Chronicle and Times-Union. Particular attention was paid to the front page and local news
sections. Additionally, the feature writings of George Beahon and Paul Pinckey for the D & C
and Matt Jackson and Al C. Weber for the T-U were examined. When IL baseball and the Cuban
situation interfaced, how did these writers cover the events? How did their opinions intersect
and differ with one another? Did their love for baseball make them sympathetic to the Cuban
cause? Was communism too great a presence for them to forgive; or did they feel the
revolutionaries deserved a second chance? Though these questions were addressed and
analyzed, they are secondary to the thesis’s purpose. The main focus was on how the respective
editors for the D & C and the T-U portrayed the American-Cuban Baseball lens outside the
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sporting pages. The feature sections of both dailies were examined with respect to how the
Cuban narrative was portrayed separate from the sporting context. Was Cuba portrayed in the
same light in both newspapers? How did they react to important figures such as Batista and
Castro? Did Cuba feature much in the “Letters to the Editor Section”? Most importantly, did
baseball make its way into articles on the Cuban Revolution? These questions are answered by
using a thematic analysis to construct the narratives within this study.
Thematic analysis, simply put, is the pinpointing, examination, and recording of patterns
within data. By discovering these patterns or “themes” across a determined data set using
“grounded,” established theory, research questions can be formed and/or answered.103 One
overarching theme, the crux of this study, is baseball as a “strong link between the Cuban and
American peoples.”104
Cuba’s developing communist ideologies and Fidel Castro’s government represented
dogma America allegedly stood against. However, the game of choice for many a Cuban, Castro
included, was baseball, America’s national pastime. During the mid-1950s, Rochester was a
stronghold for the Republican Party, no friend to the communist community. Frank Gannett,
owner of the two major Flower City newspapers, frequently supported Republican political
candidates, and even ran briefly for the party’s presidential nomination.105 And yet, the passion
his dailies held for baseball was rivalled only by the Sugar Kings’ supporters in sunny Havana.
These two cities were thousands of miles apart, both geographically and ideologically. Yet
sport, a common ground, for shared “American” ideals could have proven a bonding agent if
presented to enough of the local Rochester community. As such, examinations of three themes
103 Greg Guest, Applied Thematic Analysis (Thousand Oaks: Sage, 2012). 104 Rory Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro, http://sabr.org/bioproj/person/c34ce106 105 Bonnie Brennan, For The Record: An Oral History of Rochester, NY Newsworkers (New York: Fordham University Press, 2001).
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were explored: American’s national identity regarding baseball, likewise for their Cuban
counterparts, and how the two intersected with one another.
Outline of Study
This paper is divided into five sections, four not counting this introduction chapter. The
second chapter presents further examination of American and Cuban historical and sociological
uses of baseball to define their national characters. In addition, it also attempts to convey that
the alleged baseball bridge in itself is not critical to this study but, rather, how the American
media portrayed that bridge to its viewers. Continuing onwards with a short but necessary
history of Cuban baseball from the 1930s to 1953, the third chapter tightly interweaves the
political turmoil on the island with play on the diamond. Of particular focus is the professional
Cuban Winter League of the 1930s and 1940s and the Class C/B Havana Cubans of the Florida
International League during the reigns of Gerardo Machado and Fulgencio Batista, respectively.
This interweaving continues with the major focus on this third section. I portray the
Cuban/Havana Sugar King’s historical and cultural significances, while separately examining
major Cuban Revolution events. This establishes potential Cuban stories, both culturally and
militarily, that the Rochester editors could choose to cover for their readerships. The two
Rochester dailies are the focus of the fourth chapter. This section’s introduction provides a brief
background on the two newspapers themselves, along with a short informed look at how
Rochester operated as a civic community during the 1950s. Then the focus shifts to the primary
narrative: the role the IL and the Cuban Revolution played in each daily’s respective coverage
beyond the sports page. By subjecting front section articles about Cuba and/or the IL to in-depth
thematic analysis, the timelines established in the previous two chapters come into clearer focus.
How did the politics surrounding Cuba on what seemed to be a weekly basis incorporate the
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baseball lens outside the sports sections of the T-U and D & C? By observing these collisions,
themes came to the forefront of this study’s overall narrative. The fifth and final section offers a
conclusion and summary of findings noted in the previous three chapters and what this means for
the relevant historical literature. More importantly, however, a judgement can be made on how
sports can bridge political and social gaps, albeit at a superficial level.
Chapter Structure
1. Introduction
2. “Nocout” On a Walkoff
• Sociological Analysis of Americana: What Baseball Means to the United States
• Sociological Analysis of Cubanidad: What Baseball means to Cuba
3. Pre /Post Cuban Revolution & the Havana Sugar Kings
• History of Cuban Baseball from 1930 to 1953, with specific mention of US-
Cuban interaction
• History of the Cuban/Havana Sugar Kings
• Basic Timeline of the Cuban Revolution, with specific mention of US-Cuban
international relations
4. Rochester Times-Union and Democrat & Chronicle.
• Brief Background on the Rochester Times-Union and Democrat & Chronicle
• The Cuban Revolution and Baseball in the Front Sections
5. Findings and Conclusions
Delimitations
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The main delimitation is the brief written treatment I give the newspaper sports sections.
While they provide a secondary lens for the study, covering what they said in detail was
superfluous. I tried to view the newspapers from a perspective of a non-sporting-fan, to judge
the representations any American-Cuban baseball bond may have had on the Rochester
community. With that said, I did limit my study focus to the baseball season, when the majority
of relevant stories would have appeared. In addition, this also increases the likelihood of the
baseball reporters themselves writing pieces, either in or outside the sports section.
In the world of sports reporting, the coverage of a particular sport or team does not
necessarily end when the season is over or the playoff champion has been determined. Off-
season moves such as player trades, free agent signings, or general interest stories often crop up
in particular daily newspapers. During the mid-20th century, the reporters in Rochester covered
baseball nearly 365 days a year. There is too much strictly baseball reporting to extensively
search every day of every month from 1954 to 1960, especially since I am not trying to prove
Rochester was a baseball city; there is more than enough secondary literature to make that point.
Also, the rebels of the Cuban Revolution, which began in 1953, didn’t limit their operations to
the timetable of the IL baseball season. Not everything that occurred is relevant to this study.
With that in mind I set up my research timeframe. For both the D & C and the Times-
Union, I looked at microfilm scans of each day from April 1 to October 31, spanning the entirety
of the IL baseball season. I hold to this pattern for 1954, 1955, 1956, and 1957. For 1958, I also
looked at the months of November and December, as they were the decisive months of Castro’s
military campaign, which saw Batista flee Cuba on New Year’s Eve. To this extent, I also
focused on January, February, and March of 1959, to shed light on how the world was reacting to
this regime change and the resulting foundation of a possible new communist enclave less than
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90 miles from American soil. The remainder of research for that year was restricted to the April-
October timeline, as were the issues analyzed from 1960.
Limitations
My only primary sources are the newspapers in question. I am unable to use a Havana
newspaper as I do not speak or read Spanish and to my knowledge there were no major English
language dailies in Cuba during the Revolution. This study is restricted to a one-way viewpoint.
Further, it is hard to gather exactly how important the role Havana’s IL franchise played in the
civic culture of the Cuban capital, let alone the Cuban nation. Not much has been written on the
Havana Sugar Kings outside of basic information. Most books on the revolution fail to mention
them. Also, due to time constraints as well as access limitations to the Times-Union microfilms
that required me to travel to Rochester, I may have mistakenly passed over smaller articles. As a
result, the scans I made of the microfilm, which I took back to London for careful examination,
may be missing a few minor articles related to the narratives involved. However, since this is
strictly a thematic analysis, I believe the damage these oversights create is minimal
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Chapter 2
“Nocout” On a Walk-off
On 26 April 2014, the Chicago White Sox were hosting the Tampa Bay Rays in an MLB
regular season contest at U.S. Cellular Field on Chicago’s south side. In the bottom of the 9th
inning, the Rays led the home team by a score of 6-5. With the bases loaded and two outs, White
Sox first baseman Jose Abreu, “recently escaped from Fidel Castro,”1 stepped up to the plate.
On a 0-1 count, the native of Cuba’s Cienfuegos Province hit a grand-slam home run,
winning the game for Chicago.2 Abreu’s home run not only signified a White Sox victory, or
further cemented his then league lead in home runs; it also represented a complex merger of
Cuban and American nationalist ideologies through the sport of baseball.
Being in America, Abreu had by virtue of hitting his home run, also achieved a walk-off
victory. The term, first coined in 1988, refers to a game winning run, after which the players
“walk off” the field. However, due to his Cuban nationality and upbringing, Abreu would likely
remember this home run as his first MLB “nocout,” or knockout, a phrase that pays homage to
the other national sport of Cuba, boxing.3 The emotional context of a “nocout” in Havana’s
Estadio Latinamericano is similarly revered, if differently expressed, than a walk-off victory is in
the United States. Since they occur in the bottom half of an inning, the fans “walk out” of the
stadium happy, the runners having triumphantly crossed the plate. Famed Cuban exile and
baseball historian Ronaldo Gonzàlez Echevarría proclaimed: “Reaching home calls for a fiesta.”4
1 Tom Hamilton, WTAM Radio, 12 April 2014. Hamilton, the Cleveland Indians play-by-play announcer, made the comment during a game against Abreu’s White Sox. 2 MLB Official Game Report 26 April 2014. 3 Carter, The Quality of Home Runs, 36-37. 4 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 185.
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Americans and Cubans, told by their governments to behave as mortal enemies, celebrate
in the same manner over the same event. Sporting moments such as Cuban outfielder Eduardo
“Sandy” Amoros’s game-saving basket catch and successive series clinching RBIs in Game 7 of
the 1955 World Series for Brooklyn are as fondly remembered in Havana as they are in New
York City.5 This trend most recently occurred when Cubans illegally watched Game 7 of the
1997 World Series between the Florida Marlins and Cleveland Indians. After the Marlin’s walk
off win in the 11th inning, joyous Habanos poured onto the capital streets to celebrate Florida’s
championship, made possible by Cuban-exile pitcher Livàn Hernàndez.6 In doing so, they were
simultaneously participating with American fans celebrating in the stadium across the Straits in
Miami.7
The purpose of this chapter was not to examine the modern day context of these events as
they have been examined more thoroughly by writers and historians much more experienced
than myself. Nevertheless, the first section will focus on American conceptualization of baseball
as the nation’s pastime and as a promoter of alleged American values from the 1870s to the mid-
twentieth century. The second section focuses upon Cuba’s historical conception of baseball
representing “cubanidad,” or “what makes one Cuban” during the 19th and early 20th centuries,
and the frustrating attempts by my secondary sources to attach symbolism upon it. By the end of
this chapter, the transnational ‘beisbol’ bridge between the United States and the island of Cuba,
circa 1930, will be exposed for the readers to absorb.
5 Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 261-265. His nickname came from a resemblance to boxing champion Sandy Saddler. 6S.L. Price, Pitching Around Fidel: A Journey into the Heart of Cuban Sports (New York: Ecco Press, 2000), 1-9. 7 Steve Fainaru and Ray Sanchez, The Duke of Havana: Baseball, Communism, and the Search for the American Dream (New York: Villard Books, 2001)
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America’s Pastime
It's our game. That's the chief fact in connection with it. America's game has the snap, go, fling of the American atmosphere. It belongs as much to our institutions, fits into them as significantly, as our Constitution's laws; is just as important in the sum total of our American life. — Walt Whitman, 18898
Pioneering sports historian David Voight once exclaimed: “It seems that once one grasps
the broad historical outline of a sport like major league baseball, one’s imagination turns up
endless leads for exploring the connections between stages of baseball history and their
counterparts in American life, particularly insights into that will o’ the wisp we call our national
character.”9 Almost as long ago as whenever the first baseball game was played, people from all
sorts of sporting, academic, and sometimes unrelated disciplines attempted to, for one reason or
another, examine baseball’s relationship with this transparent citizen that is marketed, packaged,
and sold as America’s national pastime.
And it is the sheer number of these publications that is of valuable note in regard to this
study. How America’s pastime has been portrayed, propagandized, criticized, and analyzed is of
substantial importance to my work, but that it has ocurred to such a great extent is in itself of
extreme value. The sole fact that academic organizations and journals such as the Society of
American Baseball Research, Nine, North American Society of Sports Historians, and the
Journal of Baseball Review exist speaks volumes about how big a role, imagined or real, that the
sport has impacted upon the course of American history.10 The most visible, if not most
important historical work, despite its controversial methods and the debate such methods have
8 Baseball:Our Game. Dir. Ken Burns. Narr.John Chancellor. PBS,1994,Netflix. 9 David Q. Voight, Reflections on Diamonds: American Baseball and American Culture, speech at the 1st annual Convention for North American Society for Sports History, Columbus, OH, May 25-26, 1973. 10 I identified these journals and organizations over the course of my research.
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created in the sports history community, is the eleven-part documentary mini-series simply
entitled: Ken Burns’ Baseball.11
In my opinion, there are two common portrayals of baseball in American society: as an
intangible representation of the “will o’ the wisp” national character, or as a contained
unremarkable yet magnetic microcosm of whatever the current political and social problems then
absorbing the country. Ken Burns’ Baseball attempts and somewhat succeeds to be the second.
It is filled with input from noted American historians such as John Thorn, Doris Kearns
Goodwin, and even famed Cuban historian Manuel Marquez-Sterling.12 And yet, that “will o’
the wisp” permeates the entire documentary from start to finish. It begins each episode by
playing the Star Spangled Banner, the last two words of which Burns declares are “play ball.”13
The first episode or first inning is colloquially dubbed: “Our Game.” The first man on screen
giving analysis in “Our Game” is not a historian, nor is he an economist or sociologist, or any
other kind of academic. The man in question is Bob Costas, who surmised:14
"The first thing about it — and this seems so obvious that maybe we overlook it —
baseball is a beautiful thing: the way the field fans out, the choreography of the sport, the pace
and rhythm of it, the fact that that pace and rhythm allows for conversation and reflection and
opinion and comparison..."15 Moments like these, by a famed sportscaster, seem to bookend the
various segments and episodes throughout, acknowledging the flawed logic in the “will o’ the
wisp,” while simultaneously revelling in it. As Costas later espoused: "Baseball is a human
enterprise. Therefore, by definition, it's imperfect, it's flawed, it doesn't embody perfectly
everything that's worthwhile about our country or about our culture. But it comes closer than 11 Baseball:Our Game. Dir. Ken Burns. Narr.John Chancellor. PBS,1994,Netflix. 12 Baseball:A National Heirloom. Dir. Ken Burns. Narr.John Chancellor. PBS,1994,Netflix. He is the son of former Cuban Presiden Carlos Marquez-Sterling. 13 2010 interview with Keith Olbermann on MSNBC. 14 Baseball:Our Game. 15 Ibid.
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most things in American life.”16 America doesn’t want that “will o’ the wisp to fade away or be
proven false, so everyone, including academics, continue to promote this ideal. That enthusiasm,
that joy, that conscious reliance on myth speaks to the role baseball has played throughout
history on American society and national self-understanding. This role makes possible a
potential cultural bridge between the United States and other nations. However, what has
occurred more often throughout history via the promotion of this “American pastime” is a forced
subjugation to “Yanqui” values and the “superior” cult of baseball.17
What historian Adrian Burgos called a personal “initially flawed hypothesis,” and a
central theme of his book, Playing the American Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the Color Line,
was that baseball had been cemented in Latin American culture because of United States
imperialism.18 American foreign incursions during the turn of the 20th century, both militarily
and economically, helped establish baseball as a cornerstone of Caribbean sporting culture. Most
baseball historians agree with this premise of “U.S. Marines shouldering bats next to their rifles
when they imposed imperial order in a region by blood and fire.”19 However, as Burgos
elaborated with his hypothesis: “Baseball’s infusion into Latino culture involved a much more
complicated process of transnational exchange . . . In different contexts, Latinos adopted
“America’s game” and gave the sport meaning that went beyond athletic competition.”20 But as
I stated before, what is important to my study is not how the game became entrenched in the
Caribbean, but how Americans at the time viewed the national role in the entrenchment: How did
the media view the “spreading of the baseball gospel,” specifically to its southern neighbors?
16 Baseball:A National Heirloom. Dir. Ken Burns. Narr.John Chancellor. PBS,1994,Netflix. Costas proceeded to tell an apocryphal story involving an American and an Englishman arguing. The American out of patience, yells “Screw the King.” To which the Englishman replies, “Screw Babe Ruth.” 17 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out. 18 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, xiii. 19 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out, 54. He was directly quoting Eduardo Galeano who ended his statement by saying, “ Baseball then became for the people of the Caribbean what soccer is to us.” 20 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, xvii.
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According to Robert Elias, they viewed it as a part of the “white man’s burden,” one that most
were quite proud to shoulder.21 While the extent to which the United States cemented baseball in
the Caribbean may be open for debate, that the sport heavily promoted American superiority in
the hemisphere is not. Much of the following argument was gleaned from Elias’s The Empire
Strikes Out: How Baseball Sold U.S. Foreign Policy and Promoted the American Way Abroud. 22
During the Spanish-American War, baseball promoters and stars were firmly behind the
Cuban freedom fighters, or at least the American interpretation of what a Cuban freedom fighter
represented. The sailors and the “crack club of the fleet” of the ill-fated USS Maine were
heavily promoted as the first casualties in the war for “Cuba Libre!,” a war which was welcomed
by Organized Baseball.23 An unidentified primary or secondary source was quoted by Elias in
his book as arguing: “Spanish colonial rulers had been the main obstacle to the unfettered
movement of baseball talent within America’s transnational circuit.”24 Elias also stated that
former barnstormers got into the act as well, with former player Frank Bancroft commenting that
Americans like him were: “dyed-in-the-wool rooters for the Cubans in their struggle for
independence from Spanish tyranny.”25 And yet, the Cubans in much of Elias’s source literature,
are referred to as: “squealing, watermelon-eating imbeciles and infants.”26 Elias argued that
America, including baseball promoters, was more interested in “liberating” Cuba than in winning
freedom for Cubans. In 1901, the United States gained an economic stranglehold over the island
via the Platt Amendment’s addition to the Cuban Constitution.27 In response to Cuban protests,
21 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out, 56-57. 22 Ibid. 23 Ibid., 37-38 24 Ibid., 39. 25 Ibid., 38. 26 Ibid., 40. 27 The Platt Amendment, named after Connecticut Senator Orville Hitchcock Platt, once added to the Cuban Constitution in 1902, gave the United States unilateral permission to intervene in Cuban domestic affairs.
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this same American exceptionalism was used to condemn many of the same freedom fighters
who had fought under the banner of “Cuba Libre!”28
According to Elias, however, baseball was never withheld from the Cubans by the United
States, as it was viewed as a way “to promote political order and social control.” Even Cuban
ballplayers in America, such as the 1899 All-Cubans, were forced to adapt to America’s view of
society. Their United States tour was cut short when it was revealed that black players would be
playing with and against whites, something that ran counter to segregated American ideals.29
Nevertheless, baseball was still alleged to be a “goodwill mission,” spreading democracy around
the globe. Some iniatives operated under “peaceful” circumstances, such as in Japan; others
occurred in the face of bloody insurrection such as in the Philippines. However, despite the wide
scope of these efforts, the Caribbean remained the most active region both in the plans of
American imperialism and in expanding baseball’s reach.
Elias stated: “From 1899-1933, the U.S. Marines hit the beaches at least thirty-four times
in ten different Caribbean nations. . . And wherever the ‘big stick’ of military might or the ‘big
trick’ of economic dominance went, baseball was not far behind.”30 In 1913, editors of Baseball
Magazine took Organized Baseball to task for not having “established in [these] fertile fields a
branch extension of our national game . . . [and to] exploit our South American neighbors.”31
During this period prior to World War I, Marines also established beachheads in Nicaragua,
Panama, and the Dominican Republic. In each case, baseball was allegedly brought to “civilize”
those who many Americans perceived to be “barbarous peoples.”32 During a 1914 American
occupation of the Mexican port city of Veracruz, U.S. Navy captain John Leonard claimed that
28 Elias, The Empire Strikes Out, 39. 29 Ibid., 40. 30 Ibid., 64. 31 Ibid., 65. 32 Ibid., 66-67.
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‘baseball would civilize the country.”33 Back home, newspapers were mainly focusing on the
positives of “diamond diplomacy,”34 with baseball claims such as those of a 1913 U.S. minister
in the Dominican Republic who believed that the sport was: “an outlet for the animal spirits of
the young men . . . It is a real substitute for the contest in the hill-sides with rifles [and] might
[help save] the nation.”35 This belief that a game, simply by the nature of its national origin,
could instill democracy shows the extreme dedication many Americans reserved for that ‘will of
the wisp’ idealism regarding the Caribbean.
Beginning in the 1920s, many in the American sporting media and the missionaries
themselves declared that the goodwill mission of baseball was a failure. However, their
reasoning held nothing against baseball, but instead relied heavily on perceived Caribbean
genetic faults. Elias reports that after American occupying forces left the Dominican Republic in
1923, baseball’s popularity on the island decreased greatly. William Pulliam, a Christian
missionary, reasoned that their giving up on America’s pastime showed: “Just another example
of the lack of sustained effort [by] the average Latin-American in anything calling for
perseverance.”36 The Sporting News reported that “the military occupation by Americans (in
Haiti and the Dominican Republic) is regarded by the natives as a bum decision because it
interfered with their national sport of revolution.”37 Again, the notion of American moral
superiority, and that if one truly loved baseball, there was no reason to revolt against American
friendly governments, seemed quite popular in the American press. This is a prime example of
the United States putting the integrity of their ‘will of the wisp’ above condemning the
33 Ibid., 68. 34 Ibid., 56. 35 Ibid., 67. 36 Ibid., 108. 37 Ibid., 108. Parenthesis mine.
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oppressive actions of American-installed right wing dictators. The adherence or rejection of this
trend by the Rochester dailies is addressed in Chapter 4.
Béísbol y Cubanidad
Is there anywhere a land where baseball passions run deeper or where baseball tradition stands more ingrained in the national psyche than it does right here in the United States of America? The answer…. Is a resounding “YES!” on both counts -Peter C. Bjarkman38
Baseball will survive one way or another . . . regardless of what happens in Cuban
politics after the King of Sugar (Fidel Castro)’s long awaited demise, because it is consubstantial with Cuban culture and superior to his individual will- Roberto Gonzàlez Echevarría39
Cuban historian Graciella Pogolotti once surmised: “Cuba is a country that floats. The
great interchange of here with there and there with here. And one of the things that has
characterized us is the capacity to synthesize, to take a little of all parts and give it form.”40
Further elaborating on Pogolotti’s statement, Thomas F. Carter correctly pointed out that to view
Cuba as existing in one place as one people, with exiles, natives, and Fidel Castro’s government
representing the same Cuba is to “deny the very history of Cuba.”41 I will add that the concept of
a Cuban fluidity not only applies to the current state of Cuban life, let alone baseball, but to the
entire chronological extent of Cuba’s national character.
The ‘will of the wisp’ Cuban national identity is known as cubanidad, or “what makes
one Cuban.”42 And one thing that seems to be a common trait of cubanidad is that it tends to be
defined either through the embracing or rejecting of another cultural source, whether that may be
another nation such as the United States, or another differing Cuban ideological group. Baseball
38 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-200, 20. 39 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 212. Parenthesis mine. 40 Carter, The Quality of Home Runs, 29-35. 41 Ibid. 42 Ibid., 40-41.
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is a prime example of this trend occurring throughout the island’s tumultuous history, stretching
from the end of Spanish colonial rule.
As mentioned before in the background introduction, the period of the 1860s through the
1890s featured a Cuban quest for both modernity within the United States global economic
sphere and political freedom by removing the Spanish crown from their heads. The increasing
economic and cultural transnational exchange between Cuba and the “North” near the turn of the
20th century coincided with baseball’s arrival and cultivation on the “Pearl of the Antilles.” This
gave baseball the opportunity to transform into one of the earliest cornerstones of Cuban
expression of a national identity.
From the 1870s until the Spanish-American War in 1898, bullfighting was frequently
ignored if not blatantly criticized and condemned by Cubans, especially when compared to the
unprecedented support baseball received across the island. This rejection of Spain’s “national
sport” in favor of a more American or “modern” game not only reveals the popularity baseball
had in Cuba, but also serves as an example of a deliberate attempt by locals to vocally express
their distinctive cubanidad.43 As Pérez concluded: “Baseball was not merely an alternative for
the bullfight . . . it carried a political subtext that both formed and gave form to Cuban
discontent.”44 In On Becoming Cuban, Pérez utilizes two primary source quotations that quite
effectively sum up the growing anti-Spanish sentiment on the island and how this was expressed
passionately and emphatically via baseball. The first is from one Wenceslao Gàlvez, who
proudly proclaimed: “One of baseball’s greatest achievements is without doubt to have turned
43 Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 78-79. 44 Ibid., 82.
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our youth away from the bullfight, an achievement I applaud, even if some quixote brands me as
anti-patriotic.”45
The second comes from a visiting Spanish poet, Manuel Curros Enríquez. Enríquez, after
he was told it (baseball) was a North American game, claimed: “I had a presentiment that Spain
had died for Cuba . . . Yanqui ways conquer with such finesse . . . when a people are influenced
to the extent that they allow games of childhood to be replaced, how can it not be dominated . . .
the future which is a peoples’ principal essence no longer belongs to them . . . that is why the
popularity of baseball made me realize . . . that I found myself in a foreign country.”46 Both
Cubans, the ones who favored baseball such as Gàlvez and those who lamented its presence such
as Enrìquez, were unwittingly using the sport to define their “fluid” notions of cubanidad. The
sport continued to “dominate” in similar ways long after the Spanish fleet left Havana harbor for
the last time in late 1898.47
Most of the sources I utilized came to the same conclusion, some more reluctantly than
others, regarding the period between the 1902 constitutional installation of the Platt Amendment
and the first military coup of Fulgencio Batista in 1933. The Cuban people, or at the very least
middle-class white habanos, desired to become more closely linked to the United States both
culturally and economically, and baseball was one such way to achieve this.48 But to single out
middle-class white habanos and to declare all of Cuba was equally invested, would be extremely
short-sighted. Due to segregation found in American baseball and “North” society in general,
Cuban blacks stood to lose much racial equity by moving closer to the American system, both on
45 Ibid., Gàlvez wrote the first ever history of Cuban baseball in 1889. 46 Ibid., 83. 47 Carter, The Quality of Home Runs, 40-41. 48 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 186-188.
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and off the diamond.49 Lower and working class Cubans in and outside of Havana did not stand
to gain much from having their sport taken over by Americanos at all levels of operation. In
addition, most could not afford to vacation to the United States outside of Florida and thereby,
were unable to experience the “freedom” of American culture first-hand.50 Much of the positive
outlooks on this change came from the white upper and middle-class habanos.
However, as Pérez surmises: “It (the North American presence) became a permanent
condition . . . a way to take measure of the world and be measured by it.”51 Essentially,
cubanidad was measured in a variety of ways. However, those ways always filtered through the
American lens, whether the Cubans measuring it liked it or not. For example, much of the
baseball on the island was organized by Americans.
While the Cuban Winter League dominated interest in the capital, the level of baseball
that dominated the entire island was “sugar mill” baseball.52 American and wealthy Cuban
economic executives, namely owners of sugar mills and nickel mines, set up the corporate Sugar
League to give their Cuban employees entertainment to enjoy. With the locals inclined to: “talk
about their imaginary grievances and create discontent,” baseball was viewed by many elites and
government bureaucrats as a form of social control. By watching and competing in the Sugar
League, where future big leaguers such as Eduardo “Sandy” Amoros and Saturnino “Minnie”
Minoso honed their talents, Cubans were projecting their cubanidad by comparing and
contrasting their baseball with that in the North.53 The Cuban Winter League, by being so
intertwined with Organized Baseball, was also participating in this transnational exchange, or,
more succinctly, transnational engulfment. Again, as Pérez concludes: “Participation (in
49 Ibid., 190-192 50 Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 432-444. 51 Ibid., 194. 52 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 162-164. 53 Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 259-261.
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baseball) provided access to equality, an opportunity to compete and prevail within a North
American framework and thereby affirm the value and validity of being Cuban by meeting and
surpassing standards set and recognized by the United States.”54
Even academic historians fell prey to presenting Cuban baseball or their cubanidad
through the lens of the American variety or American society in general, with both positive and
negative viewpoints. Louis Pérez Jr., by combining all aspects of Cuban life into one work,
seemed to avoid these pitfalls for the most part, yet he still acknowledged that for better or for
worse, cubanidad was inseparable from American cultural influence.55 When historians fail to
acknowledge this concept, or overdramatize it, their own personal biases seep through, which
only further supports Pérez’s conclusion as well as supporting my decision to focus soley on
American newspapers for this study.
I was not expecting to find one true Cuban baseball identity from the past; I knew no
such thing exists: It differs from person to person, and that the heated political diatribes between
the two sides permanently taints the sources with bias. But, I thought I would at least be able to
find some sort of consistent cultural existence, i.e., how the sport was used to define cubanidad
during the Revolutionary Years from 1954 through 1960. However, the level of bias present in
the sources, especially in the works of Roberto Gonzàlez Echevarría and Peter C. Bjarkman,
made this virtually impossible. Yet this impossibility proves extremely beneficial to my study as
it further shows how, in large measure history, is viewed through the American baseball lens.
By focusing on the complete inability of Bjarkman and Echevarría to separate their political and
cultural biases from their writings, it becomes clear that a Cuban’s view of cubanidad is
54 Ibid., 272-273. 55 Ibid., I felt, while not explicitly stated, that this was indeed a central theme of Pérez’s work.
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relatively unimportant to my study when compared to what Americans think “makes one
Cuban.”
I placed academic sources into two categories based on ideological slant, or what I
perceived as such. The first of these are firmly anti-Castro, who believe comparisons between the
“Maximum Leader” and Hitler and Mussolini are fairly warranted.56 Two of the most
informative sources, The Pride of Havana: a History of Cuban Baseball and Baseball and
Revolution in Cuba, were both written by an exile of Castro’s regime, Roberto Gonzàlez
Echevarría. He acknowledges the fluidity between American and Cuban cultures, when he
states: “One thing appears to be clear: Cuban national, cultural and political identities can only
be carved out of their involvement with the United States . . . The process through which national
and political identity are defined on the island is a complex mixture of admiration for and
rejection of the United States.”57 However, his failure to truly understand this concept is
revealed in between those two sentences, where he proclaims: “All the paeans to the Soviet
Union in the recent past, to the sister countries of the Communist block, to the third world, and to
Latin America were largely propaganda.”58
According to Peter C. Bjarkman, Echevarría tends to underplay the brutality of
Fulgencio Batista’s reign so that his beloved 1930s-1950s baseball, the “Golden Age” that he
grew up with on the island, is not sullied.59 While he does refer to Batista as a dictator, and in
fact draws parallels between him and Castro as “strongmen,” he also attacks those he feels
oversimplify the Revolutionary period. “Batista was a populist dictator,” Echevarria explains.
“As for dictatorship, Batista was very unlike Trujillo and Somoza. These tyrants owned their
56 Echevarría , Cuban Fiestas. He places three photographs of rallies held by Castro, Hitler, and Mussolini and calls them one and the same. 57 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 353. 58 Ibid. 59 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 5-8.
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countries . . . Not Batista, who, for all the millions he misappropriated, owned very little in Cuba,
and was far from being in control of the economic elite.”60 In his Baseball and Revolution
chapter of his book Cuban Fiestas, Echevarría essentially describes his life growing up under
Batista, especially with regard to the Cuban Sugar Kings, as a fiesta.61 He further elaborates on
his earlier stance that Batista: “is not an evil monster of historic deminsions.”62 I will not enter
into a judgement of Batista’s character as this is not the point of this study. However,
Echevarria’s failure to admit the possibility that his life experience could potentially slant his
historical recreation of these events, makes me question if his works can be relied upon when
trying to define a collective cubanidad.
On the other end of the spectrum, is what I would call the American defenders of the
Revolution, led by Peter C. Bjarkman. Though some have called him a “Castro stooge,”63 of the
two major English historical volumes on Cuban baseball, I perceive his to be less biased than
Echevarría’s. On several occasions throughout his History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006,
Bjarkman commended Echevarría for his “great storytelling and wonderful research on the pre-
revolutionary period.”64 Like his predecessor, Bjarkman made a painstaking effort to disprove
the myth of Fidel Castro being a pitching prospect for the Washington Senators.65 On occasion,
he begrudgingly admitted faults with the Castro regime, much more so than Echevarría did with
the Batista administration.
Bjarkman submits to Pérez Jr.’s conclusion by espousing: “University of North Carolina
cultural historian Louis Pérez Jr. eloquently captures much of the connection between Cuba’s
19th century national origins and the foundations of the Cuban national game of baseball . . . 60 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 303-304. 61 Ibid., 303. 62 Ibid., 176. 63 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 3. 64 Ibid., 7. 65 Ibid., 10. This myth permeates all levels of baseball.
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How Cubans of the fifties had ultimately become fed up as a society with their loss of national
identity with related wholesale submergence of everything that was natively Cuban to the
pervasive intrusion of all that is covetously and embarrassingly North American.”66 Finally, the
area where much of Bjarkman’s bias is found, in his extensive post-revolutionary section, is
mostly irrelevant to my study, so it does not hinder my ability to establish a collective
cubanidad.67 However, the bias that springs up elsewhere in the work, while not prevalent,
definitively mar the work as too slanted to be valuable to my research.
While Bjarkman criticized Echevarría for being too nostalgic to be accurate in the latter’s
coverage of baseball under Machado and Batista, the former still neglects to address his own
biases for the 1961 to the present “amateur” period. Bjarkman does admit that he is perhaps
being a bit selfish with wanting to keep Cuban baseball amateur, or, in his words, “pure.”68
However, he refuses to fully acknowledge how his preference for the modern era of Cuban
baseball, one which he developed with full cooperation and access to INDER, Castro’s sporting
arm, could unfairly slant his judgement of Echeverría’s work.69 In his introduction, Bjarkman
wrote: “the baseball reorganization under Cuban government control that emerged in the sixties
was for the first time one that existed solely for the benefit of the collective Cuban people and
thus no longer controlled and exploited … by U.S. professional organized baseball.”70 He
continues his “unbiased” claims when he trumpets yet fails to name: “those factors that truly
make Cuba’s game one of the truest treasures of international baseball play.”71
66 Ibid., 7. 67 Ibid., 101-406. 68 Ibid., 4. 69 I found this on the official Cuban baseball website www.beisbol.cu. 70 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 9. 71 Ibid., 13.
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Bjarkman, ironically, is one of the same “American tourists who only see what they want
to see,” that he openly loathes.72 Just as vehemently as Echevarria bashes Castro’s alleged
amateurism and “holding athletes hostage,” Bjarkman constantly informed the reader about
alleged impurity and corporate excess in the American professional game.73 Bjarkman was at his
most hypocritical, however, when he criticized the United States government for: “restricting our
constitutional right to visit the communist country,” while simultaneously defending Castro’s
declarations of baseball defectors as national traitors.74 In my opinion, like Echevarría,
Bjarkman is an idealist who wrote an extensive and informative account on Cuban baseball.
However, also like Echevarría, his ideology muddles whatever trace of true cubanidad might
have been found within.
What this section has proved is that especially when it comes to the decade I am
studying, everything revolves around the American role, or how Americans perceive the Cuban
role regarding the two nations’ respective baseball identities. It is impossible to separate the two.
On the American side of the equation, historical longevity of the game is on their side as well as
geographical size and economic might. By the time the allegedly first Cuban baseball game was
played in 1875, the sport had been America’s national pastime for at least a decade or more.
Baseball had been firmly woven into American culture and national character no matter
which side of political issues Americans found themselves. In addition, Americans introduced
baseball to the first Cubans to play it. As such, no matter what the Cuban role in this
transnational baseball and cultural exchange, or how emphatically unbiased an American author
tries to be, the lens expressed via Ken Burns’ Baseball will always be the one through which this
role is examined.
72 Ibid., 205. 73 Ibid., 5, 12. 74 Ibid., 5, 189.
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Finally, this study, as I slowly came to realize, is not about the Cuban baseball scene but
how the American media and their readership perceived that scene. Even if I could read Spanish
in addition to having access to local Havana sources, my paper always has been about American
perceptions, nothing more and nothing less. Admittedly, how Cubans perceived their own scene
and that of their U.S. counterparts, is important, it is at best secondary, as their accounts are not
what the denizens of Rochester were reading, at least firsthand. They were reading the opinions
of a couple of local American sports writers who, in turn, were writing through the lens of the
long established cultural ideal of America’s national game, whether a positive or negative report.
So the mystical “floating” cubanidad of the period, while by no means irrelevant, does not need
to be delved into further.
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Chapter 3
Just One More Step
To understand Rochester’s media reaction to the revolutionary events in Cuba, we must
discuss the events themselves, both on and off the baseball diamond. As I have stated in previous
chapters, Cuban professional baseball from the 1930s until its abrupt end in the 1960s grew
closer and closer to the American organized variety. This strengthening relationship coincided
with the political unrest and unsure social atmosphere of Cuba’s government, both nationally and
abroad. The parallel nature of these two circumstances, not just in a chronological sense, but how
both would receive coverage in Rochester newspapers, shows the importance of documenting
both Cuban narrative strands before beginning the thematic analysis of their American
interpretations.
The first section in this chapter focuses on the island’s baseball and political backgrounds
prior to 1954. Cuba’s increasing role in organized baseball’s hierarchical structure is discussed
in detail, namely the pressure local promoters felt until they signed an official agreement with
MLB in 1947. In addition, the section specifically documents the 1930s arrival of professional
scouts, Cuban players appearing on 1940s and 1950s major league rosters and finally, the
presence of the Florida International League’s Havana Cubans from their 1946 creation until
their 1953 dissolution. This beginning section concludes with a brief description of the Cuban
political situation during this transitory period, in particular the reigns of Gerardo Machado,
Ramón Grau San Martín, and Fulgencio Batista.
In its second section, Chapter 3 covers the brief yet tumultuous history of the Havana
Sugar Kings. It references the Revolution only in instances where the war directly impacted the
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Havana franchise, such as increased security measures imposed by Batista during the 1957
season, the constant complaints made by other IL owners during the 1958 campaign, the eventful
26 July 1959 game, and the Sugar Kings’ eventual 1960 relocation to Jersey City. However the
main focus is spent on events away from the front lines, namely upon the team’s diamond
exploits, attendance and gate receipt trends, in addition to the naïve, sometimes xenophobic,
perceptions of many North American baseball insiders. Unlike the first, the second section does
not attempt much in the way of in-depth thematic discussion. It strictly relies upon basic facts
and narratives, as Chapter 4 features the majority of the relevant academic analysis.
Finally, the Cuban Revolution is chronologically detailed, from the 1956 arrival of Fidel
Castro aboard the Granma on the eastern shores of Oriente Province1 to Batista’s flight into exile
on 31 December 1958.2 Castro’s first year and a half in power, which directly coincided with the
remaining days of the Sugar Kings, is also documented. The time period from his victorious 8
January 1959 arrival in Havana to the Americans severing economic relations with Cuba on 6
July 1960 was invaluable to this study.3
This chapter reveals tightening American grips on the island through baseball,
characterized by the Havana Cubans and through political means via a revolving door of
dictatorial regimes. It explores the life and times of the Cuban/ Havana Sugar Kings, the
franchise without which Rochester’s media would have never travelled to the “Pearl of the
Antilles.” Finally, the chapter chronologically details the Cuban Revolution, the four-year war
which occurred parallel to the Sugar Kings’ seven year existence. Covering both narratives, the
baseball and the politics, this chapter puts the remainder of the study into necessary perspective.
1 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 182-183. Oriente Province no longer exists, having since been divied up into several smaller provinces. 2 Thomas G. Paterson, Contesting Castro:The United States and the Triumph of the Cuban Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 1994), 222-224. 3 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 637-638.
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A full picture here in Chapter 3 is provided so the readers can understand how it was edited,
cropped, highlighted, and exposed by the local Rochester press, as detailed in Chapter 4.
Scouts to Smokers to Strongmen
As stated before, in the 1920s and 1930s American baseball truly began expanding its
efforts regarding Cuba, particularly in the search for new sources of talent. However, the 1920s
Cuban-American exchange mostly consisted of NLB players swapping with CWL counterparts
during their respective seasons, and American white players barnstorming the island in winter.
MLB examples such as Adolfo Luque and Miguel Gonzàlez were rare exceptions. In addition,
with American organized baseball still two decades away from integration, talented Cuban
blacks such as pitcher Martín Dihigo and power-hitter Crístobal Torriente were limited to
performing in the NLB.4 It wasn’t until the mid-1930s that anyone in American organized
baseball turned a serious eye to Cuba to acquire new talent. It had nothing to do with finding the
next Babe Ruth, Josh Gibson, or even the next Luque. It had everything to do with one man’s
realization he could pay light-skinned Hispanics far less than American whites to do the same
job of hitting or throwing a baseball. That man was Clark Griffith, long-time owner of the
American League’s Washington Senators.
With the Senators winning zero World Series titles since their 1901 foundation, many
Washington baseball fans felt that times were changing when former player/manager Clark
Griffith bought the team in 1919.5 In the short term, this was indeed true as the Washington club
won the American League pennant in 1924 and 1925, winning its first World Series in the
4 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 25-35. Bjarkman called Dihigo , “Baseball’s Least-Known Hall of Famer.” He was the first Cuban native to have been elected to Cooperstown, receiving the honor in 1977. 5 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 151.
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former.6 However by the mid-1930s, while not wholly worthy of their World War II byline:
“First in war, first in peace, and last in the American League;” the Senators rarely finished out of
the second division.7
Instead of trying to build a competitive team, Griffith pursued a path to obtain high
profits with little money spent. With his lacklustre clubs drawing low attendance figures, Griffith
looked elsewhere to make money. For example, he charged the local professional Negro club,
the Homestead Grays, a team that frequently drew higher crowds, a sizable rental fee to use the
Senators’ Griffith Stadium.8 However, Griffith’s biggest concern was finding ways to lower his
talent payroll. With black ballplayers still barred from MLB, he turned his attention southward,
to the white and light-skinned “mulattoes” of the Caribbean.9
In 1934, Senators’ scout and “erstwhile Baltimore laundryman,” Joseph Cambria, was
sent to Havana per Griffith’s orders.10 A few months into the season, Cambria signed outfielder
Bobby Estalella, and assigned him to the Senator’s Double-A Albany farm team.11 In 1936, at
least three other Cubans joined him in New York’s capital.12 This was only the beginning for the
Senators. From 1934-1960, Bjarkman estimated Cambria signed over four hundred “Cubanolas”
to varying Washington contracts. Less than half that number ever saw Griffith Stadium.13 In this
regard, Cambria’s Cuban signings definitively helped produce the baseball scouting frenzy that
arrived in Havana’s 1940s-50s era. It should be noted that most of his acquisitions either didn’t
6 http://www.baseball-reference.com/postseason/1924_WS.shtml. In said World Series, Washington defeated the Yankees in seven games. 7 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1864-2006, 64. 8 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 184. 9 Ibid., 151. 10 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1864-2006, 64. Apparently Cambria owned a string of laundromats in the Baltimore area. 11 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 219. His nickname amongst Cuban fans was Tarzán. 12 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=a636e0b5. Those additional Cubans were Thomas de la Cruz, Mike Guerra, and Reggie Otero. Rafael Suarez also played but it is unknown if he was Cuban. 13 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1864-2006, 64. Cubanolas were Cambria’s racially insentive term for his island prospects.
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pan out or simply filled empty uniforms playing on the Senator’s lacklustre World War II era
clubs.14 However, Cambria’s resulting establishment of durable minor league prospects, plus his
few quality major league signings such as Estalella, outfielder Roberto Ortíz, and junk-ball
pitcher Conrado Marrero, made other organizations factor Cuba into their scouting plans. 15
Cuban sportswriter Jess Losada, mainly due to his dislike for Cambria, helped the
Cincinnati Reds scout Cuban talent in the early 1940s.16 Other teams such as the Brooklyn
Dodgers began holding exhibition contests in Havana to scout potential prospects, in addition to
testing the waters for general manager Branch Rickey’s integration plan.17 Cambria and
colleagues were both a blessing and a bane upon island baseball, on the field and off. The risk
was minimal for these owners and scouts, but severe for their Cuban acquisitions. If they signed
an organized baseball contract, they subjected themselves to verbal racial abuse, poor
transportation and housing, along with a substantial language barrier. MLB clubs, in essence,
usually paid their Cuban recurits a one-way ticket to the United States and accomodations in
segregated housing.18 These contracts were clearly one-way agreements as far as profit was
concerned. Despite this, the interest organized baseball showed in the island only served to draw
American-Cuban business relationships closer. By 1947, these relationships reached a climax
due to the actions of a man with no involvement in Cuban or American baseball. The actions and
dreams of Jorge Pasquél, a Mexican businessman, drastically raised the price of securing not
only Cuban players, but Americans as well. In doing so, Pasquél forced Cuban baseball
promoters to jump into Organized Baseball’s arms.
14 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 163-164. 15 Bjarkrkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1864-2006, 65. 16 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 269-270. Losada perjoratively called Cambria “The Christopher Columbus of baseball.” 17 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 184-185. 18 Ibid., 158-160.
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Pasquél, a native of Veracruz, was determined to make baseball thrive in Mexico. While
he did not found the Mexican League, in 1940 he established the two most popular franchises,
Mexico City and Veracruz. He eventually owned the entire circuit.19 But Pasquél’s main
objective was to make his league comparable in quality to MLB, hoping to eventually force the
creation; “Of a truly World Series.”20 To achieve this, he offered MLB, NLB, and CWL players
expensive contracts, with the intent to lure them to play in Mexico.21 Being offered in some cases
three times what the other club owners paid them, many players accepted Pasquél’s enticements.
In the mid-1940s, each of the three aforementioned circuits lost quality talent to their “outlaw”
Mexican counterpart. MLB lost stars such as St. Louis pitcher Max Lanier,22 New York Giant’s
moundsman Sal Maglie,23 and Brooklyn catcher Mickey Owen.24 NLB lost future Hall of
Famers Josh Gibson, James “Cool Papa” Bell,25 and Roy Campanella.26 The CWL lost the
services of manager Adolfo Luque, pitcher Napoleón Reyes, and Cambria signee Roberto
Ortìz.27
In response to Pasquél’s tactics and furious American owners, MLB commissioner Albert
“Happy” Chandler decreed in 1946 that any player abandoning his Organized Baseball contract
would be banned from playing in any affiliated league.28 This not only included players who
19 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 20. 20 John Virtue, South of the Color Barrier: How Jorge Pasquel and the Mexican League Pushed Baseball Towards Integration (Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2007), 110. Mexican sportswriter Angel Fernandez made this statement about Pasquél’s baseball goals. 21 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 20-22. 22 Ibid. According to Echevarría Lanier was paid $20,000 a year for five years, which the Cuban historian also called, “A fabulous sum in 1947.” 23 Virtue, South of the Color Barrier, 128. Maglie was signed by Pasquél to a $15,000 a year contract. 24 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 22. 25 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 167-168. 26 Virtue, South of the Color Barrier, 102-105. 27 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 22. Both players also competed in MLB, Reyes for the Giants and Ortìz for the Senators. 28 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 174.
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went to Mexico, but those who played against them in the various winter ball leagues of Cuba,
Puerto Rico, Venezuela, and the Dominican Republic.29
For much of 1946 and 1947, Chandler pressured many of these winter circuits to become
official MLB minor league feeder systems.30 By far, Cuba was the most sought after in this
move to increase Organized Baseball’s influence. In April of 1947, Chandler and Clark Griffith
flew to Havana in an attempt to convince their Cuban counterparts to sign a binding agreement,
one which would effectively tie the island’s baseball system to MLB. When they failed to
achieve this, Chandler said, in Echevarría’s words, “That baseball, after all was an American
sport that had to be played by American rules.”31 However, despite the clear bitterness felt on
both sides, the dispute came to an end three months later. After the Cuban owners discussed the
issue further, they collectively came to the decision to sign, realizing MLB would otherwise
eventually drive them out of business.32 On 10 June 1947, a Cuban delegation headed by
Almendares shareholder Dr. July Sanguily, approved a working agreement with the National
Association of Professional Baseball Clubs, regulator of the American minor leagues.33
The impact this document had on the Cuban-American baseball relationship was
fourfold: First, with the signing of the agreement, the CWL had to abide by the rules Chandler
set forth regarding Mexican League “jumpers.” The likes of Max Lanier, who in February helped
Almendares win the CWL championship, was banned from the league.34 Famed Cuban mangers,
such as Luque and Miguel Gonzalez, were also banned. Since Luque coached in Mexico, and
29 Ibid., Beside Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Venezulea, and Puerto Rico made up the winter ball locations. 30 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 44-45. 31 Ibid., 46. 32 Ibid., 48-49. 33 Ibid., 47. 34 Ibid., 41-43.
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Gonzalez allegedly helped several St. Louis players including Lanier to defect, these two CWL
icons were forced to technically retire, albeit only until 1949 when Chandler reversed his ban. 35
Second, it further regulated the talent pool to the point where a Cuban who wanted to
make playing baseball his livelihood was essentially forced to do so through MLB’s system. This
meant that Cuba further became an extension of American baseball. Cuban baseball was drifting
away from the sugar mill and amateur contests towards joining ranks with American
professionalism.
Third, it was the preceding forbearer to a summer 1955 dispute between the various Latin
American winter leagues and MLB. In 1954, there was a cap from each MLB club allowed to
play in the Latin leagues: “three men . . . who had been on the roster 45 days or more, and two
others who had been on the roster less than 45 days.” This cap extended to native Latins as
well.36 In addition, the previous summer Organzied Baseball had attempted to pressure the
Caribbean leagues to cut their seasons in half to reduce wear and tear on participating MLB
players.37 In protest, the winter circuits, lead by the CWL, each threatened in 1955 to bar for life
any native MLB star who without “‘justifiable cause’ does not play in his home country during
the Caribbean season.”38 This led to a war of words between various MLB owners and their
Latin counterparts. Frank Lane, then GM of the Chicago White Sox, echoed many of his fellow
American colleagues when he commented:
In one way, adoption of such of a rule might be a good thing . . . it would make the players put their cards on the table as to whether they want to play major league ball in the States or winter league ball in the Caribbean sector . . . some of the players are more concerned with landing a job in winter baseball than they are with holding the ones they have in the majors . . .
35 Ibid., 49. Also the two managers helped found and coach in a rival circuit, Liga Nacíonal, during their two year CWL ban. 36 J.G. Taylor Spink, “Latin Demands Threaten Majors’ Tieup,” The Sporting News, 20 July 1955. 37 J.G. Taylor Spink, “Big Leaguers Face Winter Ball Curb,” The Sporting News, 7 July 1954. 38
J.G. Taylor Spink, “Latin Demands Threaten Majors’ Tieup,” The Sporting News, 20 July 1955.
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especially the Caribbean natives . . . We have received letters in the White Sox office from fans who are demanding to know whether the players are ‘saving themselves’ for winter ball.39
An anonymous “topline executive from the National League,” further argued: “Nobody
can make me believe that anyone can play 325 days a year and still operate at the top of his
ability. The human body just cannot stand that incessant nervous strain, as well as the wear and
tear physically.” Executives even accused the various Latin American circuits of “exerting
pressure on the individual players . . . to dictate to the major leagues who can and who can’t play
winter ball.”40 The CWL responded: “If you bar our own players competing in our leagues, you
will kill us.”41 Although this issue was somewhat resolved for the start of winter play in August,
tensions between the two groups was palatable and represents how truly one-sided Organized
Baseball preferred to operate their relationship with its Cuban counterparts.42
Finally, in regard to forces that specifically prompted Rochester and Havana to collide in
the 1950s IL, the 1947 working agreement that tied the CWL to the American minor leagues was
critical.43 This cut through a lot of the red tape involved with transporting recently-signed
Cubans, mainly by the Senators, from the island to their minor league clubs scattered throughout
the Southern United States.44 More importantly, it came a year after the creation of a
Washington affiliated franchise in Havana. With financial help from Griffith and former
Senators prospect Merito Acosta, Cambria formed the Havana Cubans Baseball Club in 1946, a
founding member of the Class C/B Florida International League.45 Its eight-year competitive
and financial success, caused in part by the 1947 agreement, served as a precedent that led to the
39 Ibid. 40 Ibid. 41 Dan Daniel, “Latin Loop Envoys Outline Problems in Confab with Frick,” The Sporting News, 27 July 1955. 42
Dan Daniel, “Dual O.B.- Caribbean Player Pacts Ended,” The Sporting News, 24 August 1955. 43 Ibid., 48. 44 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 159-161. 45 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro.
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creation of the Sugar Kings and bringing Roberto “Bobby” Maduro into the business of
professional baseball.46
Throughout much of the Havana Cubans’ existence, they were financially run by the
aforementioned trio of Cambria, Griffith, and Acosta. It was not until 1953, contrary to many
sources, that Maduro owned a majority stake in the team.47 From 1947 onwards, however, he
was indeed the co-owner of Gran Estadio de La Habana, the 35,000 capacity ballpark where the
Cubans played their home contests.48 With the franchise being the stadium’s primary summer
tenant, Maduro heavily promoted the team and, since he was Cuban, unlike Cambria, he likely
became cemented in the eyes of local fans, incorrectly, as being the true owner.49 Whatever
“Bobby’s” true role in running the team prior to 1953, the impact the team had on the Havana
baseball scene was indisputable.
The new league instantly provided give Havana new competitive diamond rivals, such as
the Miami franchises, the Flamingoes and Sun Sox, and Tampa’s Smokers. Both Miami and
Tampa had large Cuban populations.50 Smoker/Cuban contests could not compete with “eternal
rivals” Habana/Almendares games, but the club nevertheless played, according to Echevarría,
“Triple-A caliber” baseball.51 Under the field management of Oscar Rodríguez, the Havana
Cubans won the pennant in each of their first five seasons.52 In 1947, the Cubans won the league
title by amassing an astonishing record of 105 wins and 45 losses.53 They won the championship
again the following year, and made it to the final round in 1949 and 1950. The fans responded in
46 Ibid. 47 Ibid., Echevarría mentions that Cambria formed them initially but that he sold them to Maduro after their inaugural campaign. 48 Ibid., It was also known as El Cerro or the Hill. 49 Ibid. 50 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 295-296. Apparently Echevarría’s greaT-Uncle Aurelio was the Smoker’s team physician. 51 Ibid. 52 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 103. 53 Ibid.
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kind, with over 200,000 fans passing through the turnstiles in their first four seasons, and just
under 170,000 in the fifth.54 Their final three seasons, however, bore witness to a drastic slide
both on the field and in the grandstands. The Cubans never finished higher than fourth, failed to
make the playoffs every year except 1953, and drew under 100,000 consecutively, including a
disappointing 23,460 final campaign.55 The attendance drop was in part due to the poor
performance on the field, but other factors also contributed. Two such factors in particular
prompted Maduro to seek entrance into the Triple-A IL the following year, while also
highlighting important historical differences between the Cubans and their Sugar King
successors.
First, unlike their NLB namesakes in Harlem, the Havana Cubans were, until 1951,
entirely white, with a couple of fair-skinned “mulattos.” This was due to a Florida ordinance,
found in many Southern states which forbade blacks and whites from taking part in the same
athletic contest.56 According to Costello, Havana’s roster featured at least six Negro players in
their 1953, their last FIL campaign. This mirrored the composition of future Sugar King
lineups.57 Also Maduro’s SABR entry mentions that he was criticized for allegedly complaining
that his 1953 roster contained, “Frankly . . . too many Negroes.”58 Until 1951, however, one
could argue that this meant the club did not symbolically represent Cuba. Even Echevarría
points out that at the time, “It was the only professional Cuban team without black players even
54 Ibid. 55 Lloyd Johnson & Miles Wolff, The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball: The Official Record of Minor League Baseball; 1st Edition (Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America, INC, 1993), 271. Bjarkman, who quotes their 2nd edition, claims the Cubans did not make the playoffs their last year. However both The Encyclopedia and newspaper articles reveal that Havana lost in the first round to Ft. Lauderdale, 3 games to 1. 56 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 296-297. 57 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. Via BaseballReference.com there are only 2 Negro players I can identify (many do not have pictures.) The three players I can confirm were black were Julio Becquer and Juan Delis. Angel Scull, another Negro, is listed on the 1952 roster. 58 Ibid. The article also claims Maduro refuted this charge.
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after the Dodger’s signing of Jackie Robinson.”59 Despite the admitted quality of Cuban icons
such as Conrado Marrero and Roberto Estalella, until Negro players competed for Havana in
1951, the franchise was not considered representative of island baseball.
The second factor was the low level of playing classification in which the Cubans
competed. Class B was just two steps above the lowest tiers of Organized Baseball.60 Maduro,
ever the ambitious dreamer, felt that Cuba deserved only the highest quality of the diamond
sport. To remain toiling in a circuit far below the stature of the American Major Leagues,
especially with the lacklustre results the previous three seasons, would obviously have trouble
drawing fans.61 Both the quality of play and racial tensions could only be improved by a move to
a higher designated league, such as to the historic and established IL.62
Jim Crow laws of the American south did not apply to the IL, with each franchise located
in either the Northeast U.S. or Southern Canada.63 The league already had shown its acceptance
to integrated teams, as the 1946 Montreal Royals proved when they fielded Jackie Robinson.64 If
Maduro was given virtually zero restrictions on the team’s ethnic makeup, while keeping a
prominent national roster presence, he could appeal to a wider Cuban audience. The quality of
play would be solved as well. The IL was designated as a Triple-A circuit, the highest
certification a minor league could obtain, meaning their players would be more talented and
athletic than their FIL counterparts. Along with the Pacific Coast League and the American
Association, the IL served as the literal final step before the majors, 65 a fact touted by 1954
59 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 296. 60 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 190-191. 61 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 62 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 13. The IL initially formed in 1884 as the Eastern League and still plays to this day. 63 Echevarria, The Pride of Havana, 337. 64 Baseball: The National Pastime. Dir. Ken Burns. Narr.John Chancellor. PBS,1994,Netflix. 65 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 276. The IL and AA where official Triple-A circuits while the PCL was classified as an Open loop.
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Sugar Kings advertisements: “Un Paso Màs y Llegamos,” roughly translated as “One More Step
and We Get There.”66 Organized Baseball’s Cuban relationship hit its apex, and reached a new
level of stability. In a far more brutal and repressive manner, however, the same description
could not be applied to the political and social upheavals then plaguing the island nation.
In the 1930s and 1940s Cuba was, simply put, a revolving door of dictatorial leadership.
The nine year period of 1925-1933 was ruthlessly ruled by Cuba’s fifth president, Gerardo
Machado. While freely elected, his reign was frequently marked with despotic tendencies and
repressive decrees, which included instituting martial law during his final months. Anti-
Machado protests and demonstrations occurred often during this time, eventually coalescing into
a general strike across all walks of Cuban life in early August 1933. Faced with such
overwhelming opposition, Machado fled.67 On 4 September, Fulgencio Batista, a prominent
noncomissioned officer in the Cuban Army, launched a “Sergeants’ Uprising,” in which the new
president Carlos Manuel de Céspedes was ousted and replaced by Ramòn Grau San Martìn.68
From 1934 to 1940, Batista was the head of the Cuban military, and allegedly the strongman
leader behind a host of one-term puppet presidents.69 These included the aforementioned San
Martìn, Manuel Márquez-Sterling,70 and Carlos Hevia.71 After Federico Laredo Brú held the top
post from 1936-1940, Batista was chosen to serve as the ninth Cuban President in what most
observers claimed were fair elections.72
66 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 336. 67 Ibid., 184-185. 68 Castro with Ignacio Ramonet, My Life, 631. 69 Ramón L Bonachea & Marta San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection: 1952-1959 (New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1974), 1-3. 70 http://www.vitral.org/vitral/vitral51/cent.htm. His reign only lasted a few hour. He is the father of a son who bears his namesake, the same Marquez-Sterling featured in Ken Burns’s Baseball mini-series. 71 John P. McKnight, “Carlos Hevia is Now to Head Troubled Cuba,” Montreal Gazette, 16 January 1934 72 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 16-17.
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After his willing 1944 abdication at the end of his term, Batista retired to live on the
Miami beachfront. His political rival San Martìn won the election to replace him. Batista
remained heavily involved in island politics. He was elected to the Cuban Senate in 1948 and
returned to Havana.73 In 1952, the former general ran again for president, with full support of
both the labour unions and his biggest power base, the army. However, it became obvious in the
months before Election Day that Batista would finish behind frontrunners Roberto Agramonte
and Carlos Hevia.74 On 10 March 1952, with the support of the Cuban Army, Batista overthrew
President Carlos Prío Socarrás75 in what Echevarría called a “bloodless coup.”76 It was during
the beginning of Batista’s new reign that the Havana Sugar Kings came into existence.
Sugar’s International Flavor
As mentioned previously, in 1953 Roberto Maduro bought a majority stake in the Havana
Cubans. This was the Cubans’ worst campaign in their eight year existence, finishing with a
paltry record of 63-69 and drawing well under 30,000 fans.77 Yet this setback did not dampen
Maduro’s spirit. According to Echevarría, it only increased his determination to “make Havana
the spearhead of a well-coordinated Latin American invasion of organized baseball.”78 Despite
Bjarkman retroactively calling the Cuban businessman’s vision, “An entirely futile dream from
the outset,” he remained intensely obsessed with the notion of the island capital hosting a MLB
franchise.79 It was through this obsession, filtered through the lacklustre demise of the Havana
73 Ibid. 74 Robert Jason Alexander, A History of Organized Labor in Cuba (Westport, CT: Greenwood Publishing, 2002), 133. 75 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 17. 76 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 302. The historian also declares, “No period in Cuban history has been the object of more mythmaking than the fifties. 77 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 271. 78 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 338. 79 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 102-103.
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Cubans, that Maduro came up with the concept and business model for the yet-to-be-named
Sugar Kings.
On 5 September 1953, Jack Sheehan, GM of the IL’s Springfield (Massachussets) Cubs,
announced the club would likely fold following the current season.80 This put the circuit with
only seven teams and the owners wanted it to remain an even-numbered league. IL
Commissioner Frank Shaughnessy responded by pressuring Sheehan to find a buyer for the
Springfield franchise while simultaneously attracting potential cities to fill the open slot.
Sometime in either September or October, Maduro answered Shaughnessy’s overtures by
submitting a franchise bid on behalf of Havana.81 He spent much of the following three months
trying to convince IL owners of Cuba’s baseball potential, at the same time keeping FIL officials
informed of his activities.82 Maduro faced three major stumbling blocks: Springfield’s refusal to
commit to either staying or folding, the Baltimore franchise turning defunct due to the Maryland
city’s acquisition of an MLB club,83 and transportation costs to the island.84 Despite this, the IL
owners seemed to want Maduro and Havana in the league. On 3 November, Montreal Royals’
GM Guy Moreau stated, “There are many good players in Cuba . . . A Cuban team would be
more of an attraction in Montreal than Springfield.”85 On the 15th, Shaughnessy declared
“Havana is definitely in if the league operates as an eight team circuit.”86 Eventually on 13
January 1954, following Springfield’s official withdrawal, the Commissioner announced
80 AP, “Cubs to Sell Springfield Club,” Palm Beach Post, 6 September 1953. Maduro did not buy Springfield and move them as both Echevarría and Costello have claimed. 81 I found articles in Google archives that mention Havana’s attempts to get into the IL, but I can find no start date for either Maduro’s submission or for the IL deliberations. 82
Lonnie Burt, “Draft Leaves Saints Intact; Shocks Lions,” St. Petersburg Times, 2 December 1953. 83 AP, “Havana Puzzle Maybe Cleared Up by Thursday,” St. Petersburg Times, 15 December 1953. 84 UPI, “International League Meets to Consider Applications,” Spencer Daily Reporter, 31 October 1953. 85 CP, “IL Heads to Decide Issues,” Ottawa Citizen, 13 November 1953. 86 UPI, “Havana Nine Set for Entrance to Baseball’s IL,” Sarasota Herald-Tribune, 16 November 1953.
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Havana’s IL admission along with Richmond, Virginia, replacing Baltimore.87 Two days prior,
Maduro had announced the name of Cuba’s new baseball franchise: The Sugar Kings.88
Before the 1954 season began, however, one major issue had to be addressed: the
aforementioned concern IL owners had regarding transportation expenses. Even with
Richmond’s inclusion enabling a reasonable game and travel schedule, it did nothing to defray
what Shaughnessy described as “prohibitive” costs involved.89 Maduro’s response was to
effectively remove the issue from the table. In exchange for his franchise, the Cuban agreed to
personally pay each team’s airfare to Havana, excluding Richmond, for the Sugar Kings’ first
two IL campaigns. While Maduro knowingly assumed a very large financial risk, he felt it a
necessary short-term loss to ensure Cuba’s long-term Triple-A survival.90 The issue of travel
costs affected the Sugar Kings for each of their seven IL seasons.
1954
The inaugural 1954 campaign could easily be considered an overall success, especially
when put into context of the problems Maduro had to overcome to gain IL admission. The other
major problem that could have hindered the King’s competiveness was the lack of a working
agreement with a major league club. If they were stricken with injuries or the players were not
performing at the Triple-A level, Havana would have either had to individually negotiate with
MLB teams in the hopes of getting the necessary replacements or make do with their current
roster; nothing was guaranteed.91 Despite this, Maduro’s “Cubans” were competitive from their
opening contest to the season’s final day.
87 International News Service, “Havana in IL Offically Now,” Miami News, 13 January 1954. 88 AP, “Cubans Pick ‘Sugar Kings’ as Nickname,” Miami News, 11 January 1954. 89 UPI, “International League Meets to Consider Applications,” Spencer Daily Reporter, 31 October 1953. 90 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 91 Ibid.
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While by no means dominant, the Kings surprised everyone, not just by winning a few
games against more established teams such as Rochester and Toronto, but actively competing for
one of the league’s four playoff spots. Led on the field by manager and former Washington
Senator Reggie Otero, the club finished with a 78-76 record, placing them in a fourth-place tie.92
Although Havana lost the ensuing one-game playoff against the Syracuse Chiefs, 13-4, their fifth
place finish was much higher than anyone expected.93 Havana’s stellar field performance was
made possible by the likes of ex-Major Leaguers such as Clint “Hondo Hurricane” Hartung and
Johnny Lipon, and local Cuban favorites Angel Scull and Julio Becquer.94 Most importantly for
the Cubans’ future competitiveness, however, was when Maduro signed a MLB working
agreement with the Cincinnati Reds on 4 August.95
The Kings finished second in overall attendance, with 295,453 fans for the season.96 It
was not uncommon to see over 15,000 Havanans cheering on the home team in a 35,000 capacity
stadium.97 For road trips, Maduro hired an 11-piece charanga band to accompany the team, to
perform “Cuban” or “jungle” music to curious foreign fans.98 In every opposing IL city the
Sugar Kings visited, home town spectators came out in droves to see these “hot-blooded” Latins
perform America’s pastime.99
Covering their opponents’ airfare was a bit more expensive than Maduro had anticipated.
The businessman’s total operating costs for the 1954 IL campaign were approximately around
92 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 276. 93 International News Service, “Chiefs Gain Final Berth in Playoffs.” T-U, 15 September 1954. 94 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=dc19fd6c 95 AP, “Havana Pact,” Daytona Beach Morning Journal, 5 August, 1954. The Cincinnati Reds were the Redlegs from 1954-1959 due to Communistic connotations associated with the term Red. 96 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 196. Doubleheaders however were not attended very well and sugar harvest played a role in a minor May drop in attendance. 97 T-U and D & C Sports Pages, April-October 1954. I gleaned this from several box scores, where crowds were recorded at 25,000, 18,800, 8,000, 6,000, 15,000 etc. Hower attendance might even be higher as several box scores fail to list a recorded number. 98 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 295. 99 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 23.
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$50,000, $40,000 of which was reserved for transportation expenses, this 4/5ths of Maduro’s
entire budget.100 However, Maduro acknowledged that if his 1955 home attendance figures
remained the same, air transportation costs would have a negligible effect in this regard.101
Financial issues aside, his fellow IL owners were quite happy with the Sugar Kings’
performance. The Cubans provided quality completion, Maduro’s transportation deal prevented
opposing teams from losing money on the Havana venture, and, in fact, their marketing as the
exotic baseball team helped draw fans to IL ballparks.102 As such, the Kings’ 1955 expectations
were quite understandably raised.
1955
Havana’s 1955 season not only met these increased expectations, but managed to raise
the bar. With Otero again serving as manager, his Cincinnati-reinforced squad raced ahead to a
third-place finish with a record of 87-66, losing to Toronto four games to one in the first playoff
round.103 Despite the MLB working agreement, the most productive Sugar Kings were Latin
Americans, featuring the productive base running of Cubans Alberto Baro and Ray Noble,
Puerto Rican Nino Escalera, and Venezuelan Pompeyo “Yo-Yo” Davillo.104 Power hitting was
still an issue, but stellar pitching from the likes of Pat Scantlebury, Emilio Cueche, Bubba Harris,
and even the forty-four year old Connie Marrero, dominated IL opponents.105 Home field
advantage was present more than any other campaign, with the Kings losing less than twenty
Gran Stadium contests.106 However, their away record was well under .500. This obvious
distinction between the two records resulted in opponents blaming outside factors such as the 100 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 101 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 102 T-U and D & C Sports Pages, April-October 1954. 103 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 281. 104 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=99a1d74b 105 Ibid. 106 T-U and D & C Sports Pages, April-October 1955.
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“jungle music,” inedible food and water, away players spending more time partying than playing,
and umpires intimidated by the local fans.107
Attendance rose, with 313,232 fans on hand for Havana’s home ballgames, as the club’s
gate total finished second only to Toronto.108 However, the Cuban economy started to take a
decline around the midway point of the season. The local sugar harvest, more important than
normal, likely prevented cane cutters and other field workers from attending contests, as it had
the previous year.109 However, the Kings’ unexpected winning ways, combined with the
relative calm in regards to the Cuban political situation, enabled the team to avoid any long-term
drain from their fanbase. It was not uncommon for opponents to have played in front of 25,000
“howling fanatics”110 with waving neckerchiefs, banging drums, aka “Baseball, Cuban style.”111
Though airfare continued to be an issue, the rise in attendance, along with local television and
radio contracts, greatly boosted the Kings’ financial margin. In fact, Havana’s total
transportation costs came to approximately $24,000, just over half of their 1954 receipts.112
However, the following year, nothing went right for Maduro nor the team he fielded at Gran
Stadium.
1956
Although the Cubans’ home domination of teams barely remained intact, in 1956 their
away record was absolutely dreadful. They finished in sixth place.113 As a result, complaints
107 George Beahon “In This Corner,” D & C, 8 August 1955. 108 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 103. In fact, the Cubans drew 29,917 fans to a game against Columbus setting a then IL single contest attenedance record. 109 George Beahon, “In This Corner,” D & C, 30 April 1954. In other sources, they mention Cuba had lacklustre sugar harvests until 1957, which likely meant this fan trend continued in 1955. 110
George Beahon “In This Corner,” D & C, 8 August 1955. 111 Al C. Weber, “Clark Going Up, Whisenant to Wings?,” 10 June 1955. There is a second title for article above it but it got cut off in my scan. 112 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 113 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=de8230ea
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against Havana’s supposed unnatural home field advantages decreased dramatically.114 Halfway
through the season, Otero was fired and replaced by his assistant, “Nap” Reyes. The coaching
swap did nothing to change the Kings’ fortunes, as they stumbled to a 72-82 finish.115 Hitting
was still an issue, with only six players in the IL top fifty, and only a single Cuban in the top
twenty.116 Pitching was subpar as well, with only Rudy Minracin in the top twenty.117 In
addition, the Cincinnati working agreement was decidedly one-sided, with only two players,
pitchers Scantlebury and Don Gross, spending time on both rosters.118
Attendance dropped off slightly with only 220,357 fans coming through the Gran
Stadium turnstiles.119 In addition, this was the first season that Maduro did not have to pay
airfare for visiting clubs.120 However, while Maduro’s home profits rose as a result, those of his
fellow IL clubs suffered as they now had to finance their own Cuban trips. This sparked a
lowering of American enthusiasm for Havana’s place in the IL.121 This downward trend both on
the field and at league headquarters only deteriorated further in the next two years.
1957
The 1957 IL Havana season was almost a mirror image of the preceding campaign. The
Kings finished with the same record, 72-82. Even with a full season at the helm, Reyes was
unable to improve their fortunes.122 The Cubans’ bats were largely silent, with only Danny
114 Bill Vanderschmidt, “Wings Seldom Home Sick,” T-U, 20 August 1956. This was more of a trend in 1955, especially in Rochester papers. In the Vanderschmidt article he only cites the heat. 115 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=de8230ea 116 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=bat&id=2942fa2d 117 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=bat&id=2942fa2d 118http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=de8230ea 119 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 103. 120 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 121 Ibid. 122 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=5743b711
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Morejon ranked in the IL top twenty-five.123 Havana’s pitching rebounded slighty, with five
hurlers ranked in the top twenty-five.124 The Reds sent little help during the season with only
pitcher Vincente Amor representing both Cincinnati and Havana.125
Gran Stadium attendance was at its lowest, with only 84,320 fans bothering to show
up.126 Although most of Castro’s revolution was limited to the easternmost Oriente Province,
Batista’s government imposed curfews, which drastically curtailed fan turnout.127 In addition,
two Havana bombing campaigns in July and August, tightened the curfews even more, with one
Rochester reporter joking that a third of a Kings crowd of 2,000 were comprised of policemen.128
It was no surprise that Maduro’s team finished dead last in attendance.
1957 also featured American opinion turn firmly against Cuba’s further IL participation.
Since the league operated under a revenue-sharing agreement, visiting teams received half the
gate receipts. With the likes of Rochester and Toronto now forced to pay their own transit to
Cuba, making only $500 on a four-game stand in Havana was considered decidedly
unacceptable.129 Vocal opposition from IL owners in Buffalo, Rochester, and Toronto pressured
Shaughnessy to consider replacing the Cubans.130 Also, with Miami joining the previous season,
was Havana necessary anymore as a southern IL port?131 These questions only increased the
following year.
123 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=bat&id=76934b8d 124 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=pitch&id=76934b8d 125 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=5743b711 126 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 103. 127 Ibid. 128 George Beahon, “What is the Real Situation in Cuba?,” D & C, 11 August 1957. 129 AP, “Hitter-Pitcher-Pilot: ‘Iron Man’ Deal, Now,” T-U, 9 August 1957. 130 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 131 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 198-199.
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1958
If 1955 was their best regular season showing, 1958 was by far the Cubans’ worst.
Havana finished dead last in the IL with a record of 65-88; even their home dominance was
decidedly over.132 Midway through the season, Reyes was fired and replaced by his assistant,
Tony Pacheco but, again, this managerial change did little to impact the IL standings.133 The
Kings’ batting hit its lowest point with only Elio Chacòn in the top thirty.134 The pitching, was
back to its usual form, led by future Baltimore Oriole Miguel Cuellar. Three Cuban hurlers
finished in the top twenty-five, one in the top ten.135 However, in fielding they ranked dead
last,136 and only three Reds wore a Havana uniform during the 1958 campaign.137
Attendance rose to 178,340 paying customers; however the total is not indicative of the
entire picture.138 Revolutionary victories grew with each passing month, curfews and restrictions
increased across the nation, and bombings and protest occurred with alarming frequency. As a
result, many fans chose to stay at home.139 In fact, one of the highest attended Kings’ “home”
games took place outside of Havana. Allegedly to celebrate the building of a new stadium, but
also to try and expand the Kings’ national popularity, they played a two-game June series against
Buffalo in the small Camaguey town of Moròn, drawing around 7,000 fans each time.140
However, back in Havana, to quote Bjarkman, the Sugar Kings, “seemingly couldn’t draw flies
even in one of Latin American baseball’s hottest venues.”141
132 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=629e68af 133 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 199. 134 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=bat&id=d2291373 135 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=pitch&id=d2291373 136 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/league.cgi?id=d2291373 137 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=629e68af 138 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1846-2006, 103. 139 George Beahon, “In This Corner,” D & C, 18 August 1958. 140 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 141 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1846-2006, 103.
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Maduro was now bleeding money left and right. The local television and radio stations,
that initially clamoured for broadcast rights before the Kings’ first season, were now attempting
to jump their contracts. In addition, Miami bailed on playing in Moròn for a July doubleheader,
which cost the franchise $10,000.142 Outside pressure to move or replace Havana in the IL grew,
with the Buffalo franchise particularly adamant in this regard. Club president John Stiglmeier
and Bison players expressed safety concerns as their primary reasons for initially refusing to play
their season opening series in Cuba.143 The success of Castro’s revolution in early January 1959,
heightened anti-Cuban sentiments across the IL.144 Even Maduro threatened that if the woeful
financial trends continued, he would reluctantly move the team.145 Other cities such as Jersey
City and San Juan, Puerto Rico generously offered to replace the unwanted Sugar Kings on the
1959 IL schedule.146 Despite numerous rumors to the contrary, Shaughnessy announced the
Sugar Kings would compete in 1959, inadvertently enabling their most successful season to
unfold.147
1959
Under new field manager Preston Gómez, Havana dominated much of the 1959 IL
opposition, finishing the regular season with a record of 80-73, enough for third place.148 Their
batting featured two players in the top fifteen: #5 Carlos Paula and #11 Tony Gonzàlez.149 Their
pitching came in second overall, with seven hurlers in the top thirty and three in the top twenty:
142 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 143 Matt Jackson, “Bisons Won’t Play in Cuba, Stiglmeier Standing Firm,” T-U, 14 April 1958. 144 George Beahon, D & C Sports Page, January-February 1959. Various articles 145 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 146 George Beahon, “League OK’s ’59 Baseball in Havana,” D & C, 31 January 1959. 147 AP, “Int. League Set to Open in Havana,” T-U, 8 January 1959. 148 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 103. 149 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=bat&id=2dece84d
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#4 Ted Wieand, #13 Walt Craddock, and #20 Rául Sánchez.150 In addition, the Kings’ success
along with the presence of a semi-stable government drew fans back to Gran Stadium, with a
200,094 turnout for the campaign.151 Also of note were the five Sugar Kings who suited up for
the 1959 Reds.152
In terms of on-field activity this season is historically significant for two other reasons.
The first was the aforementioned 25 July doubleheader against the Rochester Red Wings, held
during the anniversary celebrations of Castro’s 1953 “demented” Moncada assault.153 These
contests are thematically examined in more depth in Chapter 4, but some essential elements need
to be explained here. The first game ended uneventfully, ending in a 4-3 seven inning win for
the Kings.154 The same cannot be said of the nightcap contest. In the bottom of the eleventh
inning, with Rochester up by a single run, Havana’s American catcher Jesse Gonder155 led off
with a double. However, Ellis “Cot” Deal, the Red Wings manager was convinced Gonder
forgot to touch first base before heading to second. Whether Deal was right in his protests, and
whether the umpiring crew was afraid of upsetting the over capacity crowd at Gran Stadium are
unimportant. What was relevant was first base umpire Frank Guzetta’s decision to eject Deal.
This decision was important for two reasons. The first was Gonder remained safe, which
eventually allowed him to score the tying run. The second was that utility infielder Frank Verdi
had to take Deal’s third base coaching position at the top of the twelfth.156
Reports of what actually happened somewhat conflict but here are the basic facts. Back
in the tenth inning, at the stroke of midnight, wild celebrations broke out in the stands as well as
150 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/leader.cgi?type=pitch&id=2dece84d 151 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1864-2006, 103. 152 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=02d34da9 153 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 197. 154 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 155 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball:1864-2006, 308-309. 156 Ibid.
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on Havana’s busy streets in honor of Castro’s 26 July assault. Echevarría compared the
festivities to a “combination of the Fourth of July and New Year’s.” As the Cuban exile also
noted, it is quite common on New Year’s Day in Latin American countries for guns to be fired
into the air.157 Although the majority of the Cuban capital’s fusillade occurred at midnight,
sporadic gunfire occurred throughout the early summer morning. Which gun fired the important
bullets, either inside or outside the Gran, has never been determined, but the points of impact are
indisputable: One grazed Kings’ shortstop Leo Cárdenas in the shoulder, and the other ricocheted
off Frank Verdi’s plastic-lined ballcap, nicked his neck and ear, and floored him instantly.158
Verdi’s teammates carried him immediately to the visitor’s clubhouse, and everyone else ran off
the field. Despite assurances from both the Sugar Kings and the Cuban government that it was a
fluke accident, both Deal159 and Red Wings GM George Sisler refused to play the next game the
following afternoon. After heated negotiations, including alleged threats from the Cuban
military, Rochester was eventually allowed to board a plane, and fly back to the States without
either game being completed. The box score of the twelve inning contest simply read: “Game
called on account of gunfire.”160 Although largely forgotten in the American press less than a
week afterwards, it eventually provided the necessary catalyst for IL owners to successfully
pressure Shaughnessy to pull the franchise off the island.161
The second moment, in hindsight a bittersweet finale for Cuban professional baseball,
was the final game during the Sugar Kings’ postseason run. As a result of finishing third in the
IL, Havana qualified to play the Columbus Jets in a seven game semi-final series. They pulled a
157 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 171-172. 158 Bjarkman, A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006, 308-310. 159 Ibid. Bjarkman pulled this from Cot Deal’s account despite fact that when gunfire took place, Deal admittedly was in the dressing room showers. He came out of the shower just as Verdi was carried past him into the dressing room. 160 Dave Occor, “Protests by League Players Against Havana Mounting,” T-U, 27 July 1959. 161 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 201-202
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shocking upset by sweeping their Southern Division rivals in four games. The Kings went on to
beat the fourth place Richmond Virginians in six Governor’s Cup contests. Surprisingly, the
team had accomplished the impossible: finishing last in 1958 amidst threats of relocation and
revolutionary conflict, to securing a berth in the Little World Series, with a chance to bring home
arguably the second most prestigious championship in baseball.162
The Kings’ final opponent was the American Association’s Minneapolis Millers, a
Boston affiliate, whose lineup featured future Hall of Famer Carl Yastrzemski.163 The first two
games were played in Minnesota’s capital, ending in a split. However with the third contest
cancelled due to snow and a looming blizzard expected to blanket the region, both teams agreed
to play the remaining five games in Havana.164
Every game was sold out. Castro and his barbudo entourage attended each one, and the
“Maximum Leader” threw out the ceremonial first pitch of Game Three. TV sets and radio dials
across the island were tuned into, as Echevarría described it, “the voice of Rubén Rodríguez.”
The official newspaper of the new regime, Revolución, treated the Little World Series as front
page news.165 A surreal moment occurred at the end of the third contest. After outfielder Ray
Shearer knocked in the winning RBI in the bottom of the tenth inning, as Echevarría recalled,
“The fans carried him on their shoulders in triumph. Fidel Castro exited . . . on board the jeep
used to bring in the (relief) pitchers from the bullpen.”166
It came down to the deciding seventh game, with the Kings winning Game Four, before
the Millers staved off elimination with victories in Games Five and Six. With over 35,000 fans
jammed into the Gran Stadium, the Little World Series’ conclusion became another mass Cuban
162 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 297. 163 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 341. He hit a home run in Game 1. 164 Ibid. 165 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 206-208. 166 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 341. Parenthesis mine.
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revolutionary fiesta. With two outs in the bottom of the ninth, the score tied at two, Danny
Morejón stepped into the batter’s box. The native Cuban hit a grounder off Millers’ pitcher Billy
Muffet that hopped over second base, allowing Raúl Sánchez to score the game-and series-
winning run.167 As Echevarría stated, “No sooner had he been called safe than the crowd surged
onto the field and carried their heroes on their shoulders to the area in front of the Maximum
Leader’s box . . . a gesture worthy of the Roman Coliseum.”168 Another Cuban historian, Jorge
Figueredo, wrote, “I was there, among the delirious thousands that would not leave the stadium,
as if trying to preserve forever the emotion of the moment. It was most exhilarating and
unforgettable for all us Cubans who loved the game.”169
Echevarría noted:
The Cuban Sugar Kings had-it cannot be forgotten-American players. So the nationalism
expressed at that point was not necessarily anti-United States. It was in line with the early
aspirations of the revolutionary regime: to perfect a political system, not to destroy it, and to
continue to profit from Cuba’s relationship with the United States. In a few months this would
change drastically. 170
This spelt the end of IL baseball in Cuba by July of 1960.
1960
By 1 July 1960, the Sugar Kings were determined to prove their Little World Series title
had not been a fluke. At the season’s halfway point, their 37-41 record secured fourth in the
league, three Kings’ batting averages were ranked in the top twenty, and pitching remained
167 Ibid, 342. 168 Echevarria, Cuban Fiestas, 208. 169 Ibid. 170 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 342.
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dominant.171 Tony Castano was the new field manager. Preston Gómez had departed to coach
Spokane of the Pacific Coast League.172 Havana continued to draw large crowds to Gran
Stadium, but not quite the overflow capacities found during their 1959 championship campaign.
For the first time, Maduro’s club was financially stable, with Castro’s government providing
substantial monetary and promotional support. The year prior, the de facto ruler of Cuba was
famously quoted, in regard to keeping the club on the island, “even if I have to pitch.”173
However it was not to be, as on 8 July, while the Kings were on the road facing Columbus,
Shaughnessy announced its forced relocation to Jersey City, New Jersey on the pretense of
“protecting our players.”174 The political reasons for this move, namely the Castro government’s
nationalization of American businesses, increased communist leanings, and the Eisenhower
administration’s drastic reduction of America’s Cuban sugar quota, are examined in the final
section of this chapter.175
The team finished the campaign as the Jersey City Jerseys/ Reds with hastily rebranded
uniforms and a new coach. Castano and several of his players resigned from the club in protest.
His assistant, the familiar “Nap” Reyes, accepted the resulting promotion to manager.176 Despite
Thomas F. Carter’s assertions to the contrary, most of the squad’s Cuban players finished out the
season in Jersey City.177 In fact the majority of their roster remained emphatically Cuban, with
171 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/league.cgi?id=56716f8b. 172 Johnson & Wolff, The Encylopedia of Minor League Baseball, 300. 173 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 235. 174 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War. 175 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 258. 176 Echevarría, The Pride of Havana, 345. Revolucion sportswriter Faustro Miranda wrote that Cuba was , “without a franchise but without a master.” 177 Carter, The Quality of Home Runs, 74. The exact quote was, “The managers and coaches all of whom were Cuban, resigned in protest.
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the likes of Miguel Cuellar, Octavio “Cookie” Rojas, Leo Cardenas, and Rogelio Álvarez
remaining in the United States.178
Maduro was furious with Shaughnessy’s “completely outrageous” decision. The Cuban
businessman responded to the IL Commissioner by stating, “The International League is making
a big mistake. Baseball was a strong link between the Cuban and American peoples . . . Cubans
will interpret [the decision] as a demonstration to harm the nation . . . I don’t know what I’m
going to do.”179 Now living under Castro’s government, and experiencing the first American
business, professional baseball, flee the island, millions of Cubans likely asked themselves that
very same question.
Cuba’s Revolutionary Tendencies
1953
Batista’s military coup the previous year had stirred up resentment and anger amongst the
Cuban population, especially within the student body at the University of Havana. While the
deposed Prío’s tenure had not been ideal, it had been legally placed in power via a fair and free
election process.180 By overthrowing the established government and simultaneously refusing to
hold elections, Batista’s actions infuriated and united a majority of the students. According to
writers Ramón L. Bonachea and Marta San Martín, this resulted in the formation/revival of
several anti-government organizations both on and off Havana’s campus. These included the
Triple-A faction, the Acción Revolucionara Oriental, and most notably the Federación
Estudiantil Universitaria.181 While not officially involved in any of these organizations, one who
178 http://www.baseball-reference.com/minors/team.cgi?id=e1a78821 179 Costello, Society for American Baseball Research: Bobby Maduro. 180Paterson, Contesting Castro,17. Paterson does call Príos corrupt 181 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection , xvi-xviii.
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was greatly involved in the student movement against Batista was none other than Fidel
Castro.182
His exact role in the movement is somewhat hard to pinpoint pre-Moncada. He was a
card-carrying member of the Ortodoxo party, recent law school graduate, and was identified with
several radical organizations even before Batista’s coup, most notably the Movimiento Socialista
Revolucionario and the Unión Insurreccional Revolucionaria.183 He wrote articles for anti-
government periodicals such as El Acusador under a pseudonym, and even filed a lawsuit against
Batista on behalf of the Cuban people.184 He held no official position in any of these
organizations. Nevertheless, he was definitely a major player on the revolutionary scene,
particularly amongst his fellow Ortodoxos.
In late 1952, from August through December, Castro began organizing contacts to
undergo military-style training for an assault upon a yet-to-be determined target. He had given
up on a peaceful end to Batista’s reign, quoted afterwards as saying, “I already had the idea that a
revolutionary takeover of power was necessary . . . Nothing was going to change. The
frustration and disillusionment were going to be repeated all over again. And it was not possible
to go back . . . back over those long-travelled roads that went nowhere.”185 Sometime early in
1953, Castro decided how he was going to enact his revolutionary takeover: by targeting the
Moncada military barracks in Santiago province on the eastern side of the island.186
As to why Castro chose Moncada, along with a diversionary assault at the Bayamo
barracks, then a part of Oriente province, is irrelevant to this study.187 What is important is the
182 Ibid., 10-13. 183 Ibid., 11-13. 184 Ibid., 14-15. 185 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 100-103. 186 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 16-17. 187 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 104-115. His main reasoning was that far away from Havana, he would have time to stabilize his hold on Santiago and formet rebellion across the rest of Cuba.
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result of Castro’s attack itself. In the early morning of 26 July 1953, ninety five men under
Castro’s command launched the raid on Moncada while twenty-four others assaulted Bayamo.
After a fierce battle, in which sixty-one rebels and nineteen batistianos were killed, Castro and
eighteen survivors fled into the surrounding mountains. Less than a week later, everyone
involved had either been killed or captured. Castro had been the government’s primary focus.188
On 16 October 1953, after a lengthy show trial, Castro and eight of his co-conspirators were
sentenced to varying prison terms. As Bonachea and San Martín stated, “For the time being, the
leader of the Moncada attack was out of circulation.”189
1954-1955
In terms of revolutionary activity on the island, 1954 and 1955 were remarkably similar
in what transpired. First, Castro remained imprisoned on the Isle of Pines until 15 May 1955, so
for almost a year and a half Fidel was unable to effectively impact the situation going on in
nearby Havana. He smuggled letters from prison to various people across the island, but his
presence in the revolution was minimally felt at best.190 When Castro was released due to a
conciliatory agreement in which Batista freed all political prisoners, he wasted little time
remaining in the country of his birth. On 7 July, shortly after officially founding the 26th of July
Movement, Castro and several others went to Mexico, from where they planned to regroup and
eventually launch an invasion of Cuba.191 Castro spent much of the remaining year doing public
speaking across the eastern United States, gathering support, arms, and finances from exiled anti-
188 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 19-28. 189 Ibid., 28. 190 Ibid., 35-37. 191 Ibid., 62-63.
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Batista organizations.192 The urban fight against the dictatorship during this two year period had
to be led by other men.
Even with Castro imprisoned and later exiled, the streets of Havana were not lacking in
revolutionary activities. Student leaders such as Frank País193 and José Antonio Echevarría
enacted several anti-government demonstrations, protests, and even attempted military actions.194
In February 1954, Echevarría took over as head of the FEU, the largest radical organization on
campus. During his first year in charge, he led numerous demonstrations, most notably in
March, May, October, November, and December.195 Bombing campaigns in the capital became
frequent occurrences, albeit not by the FEU.196 This strategy of peaceful protests mixed with
violent acts continued, culminating in two major events: a massive riot in downtown Havana on
27 November and a failed sugar worker’s strike which lasted from the 5th of December until the
30th.197
1956
On 24 February 1956, Echevarría founded the Directorio Revolucionario (hereafter
referred to as DR), the “student’s insurrectionary instrument,” and began fomenting armed
insurrection.198 On 19 April, another radical group called the Organización Auténtica assaulted
the Goicuría Barracks in Matanzas Province; they were slaughtered almost to a man.199 For the
most part however, public demonstrations of anti-Batista sentiments were minimal until late
autumn.
192 Ibid., 65. 193 Ibid., 39-40. 194 Ibid., 42-49. 195 Ibid., 340-345. 196 Ibid., It was Triple-A, the officially funded terrorist wing of exiled president Prío’s efforts to oust Batista. 197 Ibid., 52-60. The worker’s strike ended with Batista capitulating to the union’s demands and then breaking his word. 198 Ibid., xvii, 344. 199 Ibid., 345.
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Most of Castro’s involvement in the Revolution took place outside Cuban borders.
Castro, along with eighty-two others, including his brother Raul and Ernesto “Che’ Guevara,
trained in guerilla warfare tactics just outside of Mexico City.200 Besides dodging Mexican
authorities, Fidel Castro spent most of his time either training or making preparations for the
rebels’ eventual return to Cuba. In early August, he secured over $70,000 from former president
Prío for the revolutionary cause.201 On 31 August, Castro and other members of the July 26th
Movement signed the so-called “Pact of Mexico” with DR representatives to coordinate military
and propaganda efforts. This resulted in a wave of October/November bombings, assassination
attempts, and violent clashes with police in four different Cuban provinces, all orchestrated by
the DR. These actions were meant, according to Bonachea and San Martín, to “prepare the
conditions for the general uprising that would ensue upon Castro’s landing.”202
It was not until late November, however, that Castro set his invasion plan in motion. On
25 November, all eighty-three rebels boarded a rusting yacht known as the Granma, and set sail
for Oriente Province.203 On 2 December, his forces ran aground in Cuba. But by the 5th they
managed to regroup in the Sierra Maestra Mountains. However, Castro’s army had been reduced
to twenty men, and most of their weapons and survival gear lay on the ocean floor. And with the
news that an attempted uprising in Santiago province led by Frank País had met with disaster, the
Granma’s survivors were hardly in the mood for New Year’s Eve festivities.204
200 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 171-175. 201 Bonachea and San Martín, 66. 202 Ibid., 69-75. 203 Ibid., 75. 204 Ibid., 85-89.
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1957
For much of early 1957, Castro’s forces managed to play hide-and-seek with the Cuban
military, practicing their carefully-honed guerilla tactics to delay their seemingly inevitable
destruction, a destruction so inevitable that Batista announced Castro’s death on 3 December
1956, a deliberate lie!205 Even after 17 January, when Castro gained momentum with a military
victory at Las Platas, the average Cuban assumed he had been killed aboard the Granma.206 It
wasn’t until 24-26 February, when the New York Times published three articles based on an
interview columnist Herb Matthews had conducted with the M-26-7 leader, that Castro’s
survival became public knowledge.207 Around this time his support amongst the Cuban
population grew dramatically as a result of the interviews. In addition, Matthew’s expose
revealed the apparent support the U.S. government lent to Batista’s regime, mainly in the forms
of weapons and military training. This began to turn American public opinion squarely against
his dictatorship.208
The Cuban-American community threw a majority of their support behind Castro’s
cause. There were several protests as well as hunger strikes outside the United Nations
headquarters in New York, and violent clashes with police became a common occurrence in
South Florida cities such as Miami, Tampa, and Key West.209 Public perception of the Batista
regime grew to be so negative that on 3 June America’s Cuban ambassador Arthur Gardner,
proponent of supporting the dictator, was forcefully retired and replaced by the “wealthy
investment broker” Earl E.T. Smith.210
205 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 69-71. 206 Ibid., 72-73 207 Ibid., 74-77. 208 Ibid., 78-80. 209 Ibid., 86-87. 210 Ibid., 90.
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Four other major revolutionary events occurred during 1957 in Cuba. First, from 28 May
to 10 September, Castro’s forces waged an intermittent guerrilla campaign, with minimal losses,
in particularly fierce engagements at El Uvero, Estrada Palma, Bueycito, and Pino del Agua.211
They were so successful in their assaults that by mid-November, batistiano Major Castro Rojas
wrote to the general staff begging that the army change its strategy to deal with the barbudos.212
Second, on 28 July, Castro released the “Sierra Maestra Manifesto,” in which, according
to Paterson, he “pledged free elections, rejected a military junta as an alternative to Batista,
offered social and economic reforms, and warned against foreign intervention or mediation in
Cuban affairs.” While his declaration coincided with M-26-7 infighting, potential fatal
“bickering” that endangered the uprising, more importantly it further entrenched Castro’s
persona into the American mindset.213
Third, throughout much of June,214 July, and August extensive bombing campaigns
occurred across Cuba, including Havana, mainly attributed to DR revolutionary cells active in
multiple provinces. However, due in part to Batista’s suppression of the truth, low civilian
casualties, and much of the military fighting taking place far away from tourist-infested Havana,
these events were not widely reported.215 Economic sabotage and more intense bombing
campaigns were waged in November and December.216
Before that, however, on 5 September, the Cuban Naval Academy at Cienfuegos erupted
into an uprising as, “young naval officers aligned with M-26-7 and Auténtico militants rebelled.”
Although this revolt was quickly crushed, with the help of Cuban Air Force B-26 bombers
purchased from the U.S., it was a Pyrhic victory for Batista, with hundreds of his best and 211 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 95-97. 212 Ibid., 98. 213 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 93. 214 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 342. 215 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 93-96. 216 Ibid., 99-100.
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brightest naval officers dead. As Paterson pointed out, “The foundation of his power-the
military-was beginning to crumble.”217 By the end of the following year, that military had
completely collapsed.218
1958
At the beginning of 1958, the American state department was undergoing heavy public
criticism, both at home and abroad, because of its frequent approval of Cuban orders for
weapons and vehicles for the island’s military. America’s continued funding of Batista’s
dictatorial regime was a public relations disaster. In fact, sometime preceding the Cienfuegos
revolt, the State Department decided to defer any further military requests from Cuba.219 Despite
continued assurances from Ambassador Smith that Batista would restore constitutional
guarantees and hold elections, arms flow from the “North” was cut off, at least officially.220
After the dictator had made clear his “sincere desire for free elections” in early February, the
arms flow resumed with a well-publicized shipment of armored cars.221
However, on 12 March, Batista re-suspended constitutional guarantees, particularly
freedom of the press.222 In response, the State Department sent a telegram on the 14th to the
American embassy in Havana, that the U.S. was deferring process on “all Cuban arms requests
and shipments.”223 Even though a few orders were eventually processed, the Pentagon-Batista
relationship was on the downturn. As Paterson exclaimed, the dictator had, “profoundly
poisoned the political environment and his relationship with the United States.”224
217 Ibid., 96-97. 218 Ibid., 222. 219 Ibid., 97-98. 220 Ibid., 112-114. 221 Ibid., 113. 222 Ibid., 125. 223 Ibid., 130-131. 224 Ibid., 127.
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On 9 April, a forced general strike organized by Havanan M-26-7 operatives ended in
failure, with hundreds of militants killed by the National Police.225 While it proved a temporary
setback for the Revolution, with Castro declaring “a moral rout,” police brutality further
poisoned Batista’s image in the U.S.226 The incident also pushed Fidel to the fringes of his
revolution’s ideology. On 3 May, he and several of his top commanders held a meeting in which
Castro emphatically declared that he was the one in charge and “named himself commander-in-
chief of the armed forces, including the urban militias.”227 This put moderate revolutionaries in a
terrible quandary. As Paterson wrote, “Their dilemma was real, for they could in no way abide
the usurping bastistianos nor wholly embrace the radical fidelistas . . . the two primary
protagonists in the Cuban conflict . . . Politics became more polarized.”228 This was true not just
in Cuba, but the rest of the hemisphere.
By late May 1958, it was quite clear that “Yanqui” influence was not viewed favorably in
much of Latin America. When Vice President Richard Nixon went on a regional public relations
tour, he flew home prematurely, fearing for his life. He had waded through riots in Argentina
and Ecuador, been attacked with rocks and clubs in Venezuela, and received death threats in
Peru.229 Press coverage of the tour exposed to many Americans what decades of unwanted U.S.
influence had inflicted upon their southern neighbors, including Cuba. Batista’s regime fell into
further disrepute with the American public as a result, especially in the Cuban exile community.
For much of the remaining year, pro-Castro organizations attempted to smuggle weapons and
equipment to the rebels from all over the U.S. Eastern Seaboard.230
225 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 201-215. 226 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 145-146. 227 Ibid., 148. 228 Ibid., 148-149. 229 Ibid., 151-152. 230 Ibid., 153-155.
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From late May until early August, the Cuban military waged an all-out offensive,
Operation Verano, attempting to destroy the rebellion with brute force. By 19 June, the army
had Castro pinned down with deadly mortar fire, an incident from which Fidel barely escaped.231
The revolutionaries were on the defensive for the remainder of the summer until suffering a
crushing defeat at the Battle of Las Mercedes on 28 July. Despite being routed by Batista’s men,
the encircled M-26-7 fighters managed to escape, greatly demoralizing the Cuban army.232 By
mid-August, Castro began drawing plans for an offensive of his own.233
The most important event that occurred during Operation Verano was Raúl Castro’s
unsanctioned kidnapping of fifty North Americans. The American and Canadian hostages,
comprised of business contractors and U.S. Marines, were taken captive during various rebel
excursions between 26-30 June, in what is now Guantánamo Province.234 Operation Antiaeria
was authorized by Fidel’s younger brother to create a human shield. Not wanting to risk killing
North Americans, Batista halted deadly bombing strikes on rebel positions. In this regard,
Antiaeria was a complete success, allowing the 2nd Front to regroup, resupply, and raise their
morale.235 In addition, the American State Department sent representatives into the Sierra
Maestra to personally negotiate for the hostages, which gave unintentional American political
recognition to the M-26-7 movement.236 It also increased U.S. press coverage of the situation in
Cuba to unprecedented levels, much of it negative towards Raúl Castro’s actions.237 However by
231 Ibid., 156. 232 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 251-260. 233 Ibid., 261-265. 234 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 160-162. 235 Ibid., 173-174. 236 Ibid. 160-172. The two officials were Consul Wollam, local manager of the Moa Bay Mining Company, who had twelve employees among the hostages, and CIA agent Vice Consul Robert Wiecha. 237 Ibid., 174.
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the time the last of the hostages were flown to safety on 19 July, as Paterson explained, “The
U.S. press, more anti-Batista than pro-Castro, never spoke with one-voice.”238
By mid-August, Operation Verano had entirely collapsed, as Batista’s forces stumbled
out of the eastern mountains in tattered disarray. By the end of the month, M-26-7 troops began
pushing back. On 31 August, Che Guevera and Major Camilo Cienfuegos led two rebel columns
into previously unmolested Camaguey Province.239 Throughout September, the two guerilla
leaders conducted effective raids on army patrols across the province. Rebel fronts also were
established in the Las Villas and Pinar del Rio regions in Cuba’s heartland.240
M-26-7 attacks on American business enterprises across the frontlines were
commonplace during the autumn months. During August, September, and October, the United
Fruit Company lost over $50,000 worth of property, a Goodyear manufacturing plant burned to
the ground, and the famed Nicaro nickel mine was overrun by Castro’s forces.241 Most notably,
a large Texaco oil refinery in Oriente Province was frequently harassed by rebel threats, thefts,
and kidnappings throughout October.242 Fidel Castro and the men under his command were fast
becoming enemies of American big business in Cuba. And, America’s biggest friend, Fulgencio
Batista, was fast losing control of his dictatorial regime.243
By the time long-promised presidential elections were held on 3 November, Castro and
the M-26-7 movement held the upper hand both on the frontlines and in gaining public support.
Castro had become so beloved by the peasant Cubans, that each new Batista crackdown upon
constitutional liberties swelled M-26-7 ranks to unprecedented numbers. When the dictator’s
handpicked successor, Andrés Rivero Aguero, won in a rigged landslide victory, it effectively 238 Ibid., 176. 239 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 266-267. 240 Ibid. 241 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 179-180. 242 Ibid., 180-182. 243 Ibid., 188-190.
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crushed whatever public support Batista had left amongst the working and lower classes.244 One
of Aguero’s election opponents sarcastically but accurately remarked, “Fidel Castro has won the
elections.”245 And with Batista breaking his promise to hold fair and honest elections, the U.S.
State Department unofficially withdrew the majority of their support, the little that was left, from
Cuba’s president.246
The events of late November and December 1958 are full of confusion and intrigue. As
Paterson explained, “Although Batista’s press censorship, inaccurate Cuban military press
releases . . . repeated breakdowns of communications . . . made getting at the truth elusive, a
pattern of rebel advance and Cuban army dissolution emerged.”247 On 30 November, Castro’s
troops conquered the city of Guisa near Bayamo.248 Throughout December, Guevera and
Cienfuego’s columns encircled the Las Villas city of Santa Clara249 while Castro personally
targeted Oriente’s provincial capital, Santiago de Cuba.250 When Batista’s Santa Clara defenders
surrendered on the 30th, combined with increasing internal and external pressure to abdicate his
presidential position, he decided to flee the country.251 On New Year’s Eve, Batista and select
officers boarded a plane at Havana’s Jose Marti Airport, and flew off to the Dominican Republic,
never to return.252 Even though Castro and his forces did not enter Havana until 8 January, by the
following morning it was clear to everyone in the capital that Fidel was now in charge.253
1959 244 Ibid., 195. 245 Ibid., 196. 246 Ibid., 197-199. 247 Ibid., 199. 248 Ibid., 200. 249 Bonachea and San Martín, The Cuban Insurrection, 290-292. 250 Ibid., 298-299. 251 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 220-221. 252 Ibid., 222-223. 253 Ibid., 226-227.
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Castro’s first year and a half in charge of Cuba, particularly in the island’s new political
relations with America, can be divided into five time periods. The first such period took place in
the immediate aftermath of Batista’s flight. Soon after Fidel’s arrival in Havana, summary
executions began taking place. Batistianos were rounded up, given speedy trials, and then put to
death by firing squad.254 By the time Castro’s handpicked presidential candidate, Manuel
Urrutia Lleó, had arrived from exile in Venezuela and finished organizing the Revolutionary
Government, dozens had been executed.255 In fact, by the end of January, an estimated 257
Cubans were put to death by Castro’s military tribunals.256 Alleged denials of due process of law
ran rampant both in the local and foreign press. In mid-February to try and resolve the public
relations disaster, the trials became open to the public, but that only fueled the fire further.257
Public perception in America, while not yet ready to declare him a dictator, did began to take a
negative direction. This was intensified by his treatment of American hotel/casino owners,
imposing heavy taxes and strict regulatory guidelines.258
He was seen by many in the Western press as being nothing more than a “power hungry
caudillo,”259 which was further underscored by his actions the following month. On 1 February,
Castro began implementing agrarian reform projects on the island, long perceived as an initial
step towards communism.260 On the 13th, Castro declared himself the new Cuban Prime
Minister, replacing José Miró Cardona, an Urrutia appointee.261 With Urrutia increasingly taking
the role of a figurehead president, the man who chose the former federal judge to run Cuba, was
254 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 220-223. 255 Ibid., 637. 256 AP, “War Crime Trials Continue in Cuba,” T-U, 30 January 1959. 257 Maurice Zeitlin and Robert Scheer, Cuba: Tragedy in Our Hemisphere (New York: Grove Press, 1963), 64-70. 258 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 234-235. 259 Bonachea and San Martìn, The Cuban Insurrection, Pejorative Spanish term loosely translated as warlord or dictator. 260 AP, “Castro Starts Cuban Land Reform,” T-U, 2 February, 1959. 261 AP, “Major Problems Face Castro as Cuba’s Premier,” T-U, 14 February 1959.
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revealed to be the one truly in charge.262 By March however, executions were no longer
commonplace, Castro was content as prime minister, and a rudimentary governmental setup was
firmly in place.263
The second time period, albeit a brief one, took place in April. On the 14th, Castro
embarked on a public relations/ fact-finding tour across North America. His primary stop was
the United Nations in New York City.264 He also visited Boston, Montreal, and Washington
D.C., where he gave several speeches to the American press.265 By the time Castro returned to
Cuba, he had become an American celebrity, and had entrenched his presence in the North’s
national psyche.266
The third period, April through July, was one of insecurity and uneasiness on behalf of
the American State Department. During his first four months in power, Castro had showed both
positive and negative traits from a U.S. foreign policy standpoint. As such, government experts
deliberated endlessly what leadership role he would exhibit: capitalistic reformer or socialist
dictator.267 During his D.C. trip, Castro had pledged to the Associated Press that if a war broke
out between the United States and the Soviet Union, Cuban troops would contribute to the
American war effort.268 On 30 April, he also told the Associated Press that, “I don’t agree with
Communism.”269 Earlier that month, he demanded American companies based in Cuba to
262 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 197. 263 AP, T-U, January-March 1959. However executions did occur on and off. 264 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 257. 265 AP, D & C, April 1959. Eisenhower was notably absent from Washington during Castro’s visit. In fact the Cuban leader was told the President had a golf game that was unavoidable. 266 Ibid. 267 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 257-258. 268 AP, “Castro Vows to Side with West in War,” D & C, 20 April 1959. 269 Lyle C. Wilson, “Castro’s Words Vs Facts,” T-U, 1 May 1959. Wilson labeled it a “stock answer.”
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increase their production output to stimulate the new and struggling economy, despite rumors
alleging he planned to nationalize them.270
In contrast, Castro publically supported left-leaning revolts in fellow Latin American
nations, such as Panama.271 Rumours abounded in early June that he had personally supplied
three rebel-crewed boats to Nicaraguan rebels fighting the American-backed Somoza regime.272
Castro never officially denied or confirmed these rumors, but their existence made the State
Department uneasy about its relationship with the island.273 On 17 May, Eisenhower’s
administration reacted with alarm when the Agrarian Reform Act, seemingly a socialist
economic strategy, became Cuban law.274 On 18 July, Urrutia unwillingly resigned the
presidency, citing irreconcilable differences with Castro, namely that the former had come out
very strongly against Communist influences. His replacement, Osvaldo Dorticòs Torrado, was
even more of a figurehead than Urrutia, further cementing an anti-American mentality
surrounding Cuba’s revolutionary leaders.275 Even though 26th July celebrations went off with
nary a mention of anti-Americanism, there was a sense that U.S.-Cuban relations were about to
take a drastic turn.276
The fourth time period, August-December gave little hints towards the break that was
about to occur between the two nations. Near the middle of August, Castro’s forces foiled an
alleged Dominican-sponsored coup just north of Havana.277 In the middle of October, a British
government delivery of fighter jets intended for the Cuban Air Force, was clandestinely nixed by
270 AP, “Castro Denounces all Dictators, Wants Bigger Output by U.S. Plant,” D & C, 21 April 1959. 271 Jack Rutledge for AP, “Cuban Invaders Sing, Leave Weeping Girls,” D & C, 2 May 1959. Castro supported their cause, but helped negotiate the invaders’ surrender on behalf of the Organization of American States. 272 AP, “Nicaragua Mounts Grim for Unconfirmed Invasion Force,” D & C, 4 June 1959. 273 Paterson, Contesting Castro, 257, 274 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 637. 275 Echevarría, Cuban Fiestas, 198. 276 AP, “Millions in Havana Cheer as Castro Warns Critics, Accepts Post as Premier,” D & C, 27 July 1959. 277 AP, “Almost Got Trujillo, Castro Tells Cuba,” D & C, 15 August 1959. The invaders were repelled by American barbudo commander William Morgan.
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the U.S. State Department.278 Earlier that month, a Cuban airliner was hijacked by men
wielding grenades, ordering it rerouted to Miami, where the attackers claimed asylum.279
In early December, Eisenhower granted approval to the Central Intelligence Agency’s
request to conduct a plan of sabotage and covert action against the Castro regime.280
1960
Almost as soon as 1960 began, the American-Cuban governmental impasse widened
insurmountably. First in February, Cuba signed a $100,000,000 trade agreement with Soviet
deputy premier Anastas Mikoyan, a move pushing the island further into the Communist sphere
of influence.281 In March, Eisenhower and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara approved
Operation Pluto, intended to create a paramilitary group of exiled Cubans to overthrow Castro.282
On 4 March, the French freighter La Coubre, carrying weapons and other supplies for Cuba,
exploded in Havana’s harbor. Almost immediately, Castro erroneously declared it to be the
work of the CIA, which only enflamed tensions further.283
On 8 May, Cuba and the Soviet Union officially reopened diplomatic relations with one
another after having been suspended by Batista almost a decade earlier.284 In addition, Castro
began nationalizing Cuban newspapers, effectively muzzling free press, a lingering mainstay of
Americana.285 This action renewed angry feelings between the U.S. and Cuba as political
rhetoric flew back and forth. On 11 May, the revolutionary government alleged that Eisenhower
was planning on invading Cuba, which fanned the island’s population into an anti-American
278 AP, “British Hedge on Report of Jets-For-Cuba Deal,” D & C, 17 October 1959. 279 AP, “Cuba Tightens Rules After Plane Incidents,” D & C, 4 October 1959. 280 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 637. 281 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 637. 282 Ibid. 283 Ibid. Even Ramonet admits there was no evidence to back up Castro’s charges. 284 Ibid. 285 AP, T-U, May-June 1959. This included Diario de la Marina, Prensa Libre,El Mundo, and the Havana Post.
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mob.286 On the 13th, Castro claimed the Cuban Navy had attacked a U.S. submarine just off the
Havana coast.287 On the 23rd, American papers printed alleged Cuban persecution of its Catholic
citizens.288 And on the 27th, Eisenhower publically revealed a 14 May mandate that ceased
technical aid, around $200,000 annually, to the island.289
During June and July, the two governments participated in what was essentially a
diplomatic standoff. Neither wanted to blink first. In mid-June, Eisenhower and his allies in
Congress released statements, threatening to eliminate the Cuban sugar quota, a potential
crippling blow to the island’s single-crop economy.290 This was allegedly done to discourage
further Warsaw Pact economic and political advisors flocking to the island, mainly from the
USSR, Czechoslovakia, and East Germany. It did not have the desired effect.291 Castro’s
administration retaliated with statements revealing his intent to nationalize American business
holdings. On 28 June, Castro accused the U.S. government’s proposed sugar cuts of being, “not
only immoral but treacherous . . . They reserve the right to do us harm in the magnitude they
desire.”292 The Cuban prime minister did not wait long to make good on his nationalization
threat.
On 29 June, Castro seized and nationalized three American oil refineries belonging to
Texaco, Esso, and Shell, after each facility refused to refine Soviet oil.293 On 1 July, the U.S.
Congress passed a resolution that gave Eisenhower executive privilege regarding the purchase of
Cuban sugar.294 Five days later, the President reduced the U.S./Cuba sugar contract by 95%,
286 UPI, “Cubans Stage Anti-U.S. Rallies,” T-U, 12 May 1960. 287 AP, “Cuba Fired at U.S. Sub, Castro Says,” T-U, 14 May 1960. 288 AP, “Fight Reds, Catholics in Cuba Told,” T-U, 23 May 1960. 289 AP, “U.S. Slashing Aid to Cuba,” T-U, 27 May 1960. 290 UPI, “House Unit Undecided on Giving Ike Power to cut Cuba Sugar Sales,” D & C, 24 June 1960. 291 George Beahon, “U.S.-Cuba Gap Widens Daily; Reds Pour In,” D & C, 28 June 1960. 292 AP, “Sugar Bill Arouses Castro in New Anti-U.S. Diatribe.” T-U, 28 June 1960. 293 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 637. 294 AP, “House Votes Ike Sugar Quota Rein,” T-U, 1 July 1960.
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virtually banning the product from American markets.295 On 6 August, Castro decreed that all
American oil refineries, sugar mills, and electric/telephone companies were to be nationalized by
the Revolutionary Government. U.S. businesses began evacuating personnel. Between
Eisenhower’s sugar cuts and Castro’s hostile takeovers, as writer Hugh Thomas described, “A
baseball team decided not to play in Havana.”296
At the time that the Havana Sugar Kings’ first game was played in April of 1954, Fidel
Castro was serving a fifteen-year jail sentence on the Isle of Pines. By the time their last game
ended on 8 July 1960, that same man had ruled Cuba for a year and a half. The Kings’ IL arrival
falsely portrayed Cuba to Americans as a quiet and unvolatile island country the island country
seemingly was under Batista. It also helped emphasize the friendly business relationship
between Cuba and their American neighbors. Their forced removal to Jersey City served as a
forgotten yet symbolic exclamation point on the virtual cessation of diplomatic relations between
the two nations. The journey of the IL in Cuba and the Revolution’s path through the island
nation resulted in two narratives unqiue to their own separate cultural worlds of politics and
sports. Rochester, New York’s newspaper coverage on these two intersecting narratives, along
with my thematic analysis of it, is the major focus of Chapter 4 and this study.
295 Castro with Ramonet, My Life, 638. 296 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, i. It came from Thomas’s book Cuba: The Pursuit of Freedom.
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Chapter 4
Off the Cuban Cuff
“The paroxysm of guilt that Frank Verdi’s shooting caused between my memory and my sense of self was no more than the effect of a successful public-relations presentation. The league smelled like roses because it got exactly what it wanted. My devotion to the newspapers is now revealed as no more than a willful submission to the self-serving pronouncements from the people who made the money off baseball. The joke is only on me. And the joke exists only because, against my knowledge to the contrary, I chose to take this issue seriously.”– Howard Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War.1 In the past three chapters, the alleged baseball cultural bridge between the American and
Cuban peoples was thoroughly examined. The study presented that international cultural bond as
being real, yet almost entirely one-sided. On one hand, Organized Baseball’s influence upon
Cuba was profound as it not only impacted the island culturally, but economically and
politically. On the other hand, only Latin American stereotypes, cultural anecdotes, and a
handful of big league prospects travelled from Cuba to the United States. In this regard, the
Havana Sugar Kings experiment was no exception from its barnstorming predecessors. The
question persists: with only “hot-blooded Latins”2 a “bongo orchestra, or whatever you call those
tub thumpers,”3 and rare prospects such as Miguel Cuellar being presented to American
audiences, how could the sporting cultural dynamic between the two nations have remained
functional, despite the allegedly “anti-American” Cuban Revolution?4
To answer this question on a small yet important scale, I turn to the two Rochester dailies
of the time period, the D & C and the T-U. For the city’s newspaper readership, these
1 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 121. 2 Burgos Jr., Playing America’s Game, 37. 3 Tony Wurzer, “Bisons Home after an Adventure in Dust, Heat, Bugs, and Baseball,” Buffalo Evening News, 9 June 1958. 4 UPI, “Cubans Stage Anti-U.S. Rallies,” T-U, 12 May 1960.
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publications were the primary purveyors and analysts of the American-Cuban relationship, both
on and off the diamond. In days long before the internet, local newspapers remained a primary
source for Americans to learn about civic, federal, and global issues.5 What 1950s Rochesterians
read in the D & C and T-U likely shaped and influenced how each individual reader, as well as
the community in general, viewed the outside world. By examining what the two dailies
published, presented either by their own writers or other sources during this time frame, this
study exposes a singular Gannett-Cuban position touted to Rochester’s public.
This chapter consists of two encompassing sections in which the study’s findings are
presented. The first is a brief historical background on the Rochester newspaper industry up to
the 1950s, specifically the beginnings of Frank Gannett’s multimedia empire. As the D & C and
the T-U, Gannett’s flagship operations, contained the majority of articles thematically analyzed,
it was important to detail a chronological and philosophical blueprint of how the two dailies
conducted business. This section largely takes its conclusions from Bonnie Brennan’s For the
Record: An Oral History of Rochester, New York Newsworkers. It was an incalculable asset in
this regard.6
The second section chronologically analyzes the Gannett newspaper coverage of Cuban
issues, mainly from outside the sporting pages. This is key for four reasons. First, while
baseball was the primary excuse for Rochester-based reporters to visit Cuba, by the end of the
1950s, it was not the most newsworthy island story, as Chapter 3 emphatically proved. Baseball
games took place during the Revolution; the Revolution did not take place during baseball
games. Essentially, Sugar Kings contests were nothing more than a lens through which Cuban
political unrest could be viewed. As such, analyzing the Rochester print presentation of the
5 Radio and Television were also important sources, but I meant in terms of print media. 6 Bonnie Brennan, For the Record: An Oral History of Rochester, New York Newsworkers (New York: Fordham University Press, 2001).
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entire Cuban narrative is academically necessary. Second, most of these front page and front
section stories were written by the Associated Press, United Press International, or writers co-
opted from larger, more influential newspapers.7 How the D & C and T-U utilized these essential
media tools further helped contextualize how the sporting angle factored into Gannett’s portrayal
of Cuba. Third, editorial columns and Letters to the Editor revealed how important the dailies’
respective editors perceived Cuban events and how local readers reacted to them. As Senzel said:
“My interests began to spread to the front sections of the newspaper, which I hadn’t realized
existed . . . I turned my back on baseball. Invigorated by that great American energy of progress
and self-development, I was moving on to more important things.”8 Since it is likely many
Rochesterians did not read the sports section, it was important to analyze the front sections to see
how much impact the sports section might have had upon the front pages. Finally, it helped
reveal publishing, editorial, and narrative differences between the morning newspaper, the D &
C, and the afternoon daily, the T-U.
7 T-U and D & C archives, 1954-1960. 8 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 27.
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A Tale of Two Newspapers
Émigrés from less conservative climes find the Rochester newspapers conspicuously lacking in any semblance of metropolitan journalism . . . A kind word for the Democratic Party or its candidate is harder to find than a downtown parking place. Without serious competition there is no necessity to crusade and therefore increase reader interest and circulation. (They) content themselves with a role of mere documentation . . . This estimate is slightly more accurate than cruel- G. Curtis Gerling.9
When people complain about the allegedly liberal press, my God! I can remember when we used
to be afraid to turn a story in because it would reflect adversely on the Republican Party- Arthur Deutsch, former D & C investigative reporter, 1994.10
Without or with offence to friends or foes, I sketch your world exactly as it goes- Lord Gordon
Byron. This quotation ran underneath the D & C logo on the morning daily’s editorial page.11 Although newspapers have a long-established history in the Greater Rochester
metropolitan area, to trace how the local media market evolved by the 1950s into a Gannett
monopoly, requires a study directed on the period after the conclusion of World War I. This is
because between the late 1800s and the turn of the twentieth century, the industry remained
largely the same, not in technology, but in the producer-consumer economic relationship.
Throughout the 1800s, Rochesterians and those living in surrounding areas had a wide variety of
local newspapers and broadsheets to choose from, featuring a fair range of political and social
views between them.12
In this regard, little had changed by the time of the Great War. By early 1918, at least
five independently-owned major dailies competed for control of Rochester’s circulation and
advertising market. The morning’s Democrat & Chronicle (the Daily Democrat and Daily
Chronicle merged in 1870) and the afternoon’s Rochester Times and Rochester Post-Express
represented the local Republican interests. The city’s Democrat stalwarts received their daily
9 G. Curtis Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A (Webster: Plaza Publishers, 1957). 10 Brennan, For the Record, 75. 11 D & C, Editorial Page, 1954-1960. 12 Blake McKelvey, Rochester on the Genesee: The Growth of a City (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1973), 145.
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news from the Rochester Herald and the Rochester Union & Advertiser.13 By 1937 just two of
the five remained in operation, and both were owned by Frank Ernest Gannett.14
Having risen from the D & C delivery boy ranks in 1885 to owning his first newspaper,
the Elmira Gazette in 1906, Cornell alum Frank Gannett would have accepted nothing less than
achieving a media empire across the United States.15 In early 1918, Gannett and his business
partner Erwin L. Davenport moved to Rochester in the hopes of buying an established daily. The
duo ended up purchasing both the Times and Union & Advertiser, immediately announcing a
merger of the two newspapers. The 9 March 1918 Union & Advertiser front page proclaimed:
“The oldest and the newest are now brought together, consolidated into one GREAT
NEWSPAPER under new and progressive management, and united for A GREATER AND
BETTER ROCHESTER.”16 After this deal went into effect, Gannett proceeded to diminish the
rest of his Flower City competitors into submission.
Almost immediately following the newly minted Rochester Times-Union’s first printed
edition, Gannett dubbed the T-U as a politically unaffiliated “independent paper.”17 In addition,
the ownership group aligned themselves with local businessman, philanthropist and anti-union
advocate, George Eastman. Having founded the industrial giant Eastman Kodak, the elderly
camera magnate was considered a hero amongst many Rochesterians across all social classes and
political boundaries.18 His support of Gannett’s group undoubtedly held major influence over
their subsequent rise to the top of the local market.
13 Brennan, For the Record, 2. 14
Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 11. 15 Brennan, For the Record, 1. 16 Ibid., 1-3. 17 Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A. 18 McKelvey, Rochester on the Genesee, 166-173. McKelvey attributes the aftermath of World War I as a primary enabler of this collaboration.
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By 1924, Gannett had purchased five more major dailies across the Empire State. More
importantly, he bought out his fellow T-U investors to become the afternoon paper’s sole
proprietor. Four years later, Gannett bought out his last original competitor, the D & C, and in
an interesting move, decided to keep both papers instead of merging his two local acquisitions.
With the Herald and Post-Express having left town, only one man stood in the way of Gannett
having a Rochester monopoly: powerful newspaper magnate William Randolph Hearst. From
1922 to 1937, Gannett competed in the Flower City against Hearst’s daily, the Rochester-
Evening Journal, and his weekly publication, the Rochester Sunday American. In 1937,
however, the former proposed to the latter a mutually beneficial arrangement. At that time,
Gannett was trying to move into Albany, which had always been a Hearst New York stronghold.
Over time, Hearst’s businesses in New York State’s capital city had incurred a massive amount
of debt. If Hearst would sign over the rights to his Rochester newspapers, Gannett would pay off
the former’s debt and give up his incursions into Albany’s market. After the deal was made
official, Gannett closed both the Evening Journal and the Sunday American.19
From 1938 onwards, Rochester’s newspaper industry comprised, as Senzel described: “a
Gannett morning paper, a Gannett evening paper, and never a liquor or cigarette advertisement
between the two. And given the character of the time and place, it would have been unthinkable
for things to have been otherwise.”20 The character of that time and place, 1940-1950s
Rochester, was a city of distinct economic and industrial growth. While Eastman Kodak brought
prosperity to the greater metropolitan area since 1888, other companies populated the business
landscape as well.21 Bausch and Lomb, a vison-wear company which had provided local jobs for
19 Brennan, For the Record, 3-5. 20 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 11. While Gannett did indeed bar alcoholic beverages to be advertised in either Rochester daily, cigarette and cigar advertisements appeared on occasion. 21 McKelvey, Rochester on the Genesee, 147-151
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decades before Eastman’s development, experienced a boom in the aftermath of the Second
World War.22 Xerox also prospered with its exclusive monopoly over the fairly new yet widely
utilized invention, the photocopier.23 Genesee Brewing Co. experienced a local post-Prohibition
resurgence that lasted for decades.24 Yet Rochester was still called, both by locals and outsiders,
as “Kodak’s Town.” As a naïve youth at the time, Senzel later recounted, “It was believed that
there were no poor people in Rochester, only Kodak workers.”25
During the 1940 and 1950s, there were two seeming absolutes about Rochester, the first
related to race. Rochester was not just “Kodak Town,” but a white Republican town, at least on
the surface.26 In terms of ethnic ancestry, British, German, and Italian were the most commonly
traced lineages for the local-born up to the 1940s.27 There were also several sizable thriving
Eastern European enclaves including over 20,000 Jewish residents.28 In the late 1940s, out of a
civic population of around 330,000, just over 7,000 were classified as Negroes. Within less than
ten years, that number more than doubled to well over 16,000.29 Until the late 1940s, there was
barely any trace of a Hispanic community in the Flower City. Those that did live there struggled
heavily with a language barrier and ethnic discrimination.30 By the 1960s with a population of
around 4,000, Puerto Ricans had entrenched themselves in Rochester’s community, founding the
Puerto Rican Council in the mid-1950s.31 As official city historian Blake McKelvey pointed out:
“newcomers were welcomed to Rochester-except for Negroes and Puerto Ricans.”32
22
Ibid., 234. 23 Ibid., 245. 24 Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A. 25
Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 10-11. 26 Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A. 27 McKelvey, Rochester on the Genesee, 139. 28 Blake McKelvey, Rochester: An Emerging Metropolis, 1925-1961 (Rochester: Christopher Press, 1961), 241. 29 Ibid. 30 Ibid., 237. 31 Ibid., 241-242. 32
Ibid.
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Despite this, according to several former Gannett employees, it wasn’t until the 1964
citywide race riots that the two Rochester dailies covered local minority issues in any meaningful
way.33 The D & C and T-U did not hire their first black writers until the mid-1960s: Earl
Caldwell and Desmond Stone, respectively.34 In For the Record, one D & C reporter mentioned
a photo editor that would deliberately white-out or crop black faces from photographs.35 Former
T-U police beat reporter Robert Beck lamented in a 1994 interview that the Rochester media
after the 1960s had allegedly become a “Negro throwaway,” and talked about African-
Americans and Hispanics in extremely negative terms.36 This study is not trying to make the
case that Gannett’s Rochester publications were racist. It is important, however, to consider how
newspapers, alleged to be either blind or willfully ignorant of the city’s ethnic and racial
divisions, would accept a baseball team comprised primarily of Hispanic and Negro players,
many whom didn’t speak English.
The other absolute was Rochester’s and Gannett’s unwavering loyalty to the Republican
Party. Even before Gannett gained his Rochester media monopoly, the Western New York area
had long been a Grand Old Party stronghold, outside of the Democrat hub in neighbouring
Buffalo.37 Senzel recalled, “Government in Rochester was always conservative and always
Republican. Rochester always considered its own districts to be the safest Republican seats in
Congress.”38 In 1957, local author G. Curtis Gerling commented that the city was run by“ultra-
conservative Republican policies and the administration’s short sighted miserliness,” albeit
stating that those tendencies were then, “at least temporarily on the shelf.”39 Arthur Deutsch,
33 Brennan, For the Record, 61-65. 34 Ibid., 57-59. 35 Ibid., 56-57. 36 Ibid., 64-65. 37 Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A. 38
Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 10. 39 Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A.
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former D & C reporter, surmised: “If you did any digging it was Republican dirt because there
was no other dirt to dig.”40 And in contrast to Buffalo, Rochester was definitively not a union
town, with George Eastman’s paternalistic methods of looking after employees enough to
prevent the labor movement from gaining much traction in the Flower City.
Though Gannett promised in 1918 that the T-U would be an “independent paper,” 41 by
the 1940s and 1950s, this was no longer the case. Gerling claimed it frequently read as a “house
organ of the Republican party” due to the “official” Gannett company policy: “See No Evil, Hear
No Evil, Speak No Evil.”42 He also expressed sympathy for Rochesterians when the city “was
relegated to the status of a one newspaper town, condemned to the consumption of carefully
selected, slightly slanted, well masticated news regurgitated in printed form.”43 Ex-D & C
reporter Mitch Kaidy commented: “There was pressure to not write certain stories, not to write
about labor, and not to write about left-wing groups and not to write about consumer interests . . .
There were stories that I thought the community should know about and the unseen editors
didn’t.”44 Kaidy further reflected: “The Gannett newspapers were always right-wing. Gannett
himself was far to the right of his editorial staff.”45 Deutsch claimed that Paul Miller, editor of
the T-U as well as VP of the Gannett Board, was one of the “Big Three in Monroe County
Republican politics.”46 Since these kinds of conditions did not bode well for reporters wanting to
issue a pro-communistic message, despite Gannett’s death in early 1957, the previous paragraph
should be well held in mind when reading the study’s findings.47
40 Brennan, For the Record, 74. 41 Ibid., 3. 42Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A. 43 Ibid. 44 Brennan, For the Record, 159. 45 Ibid., 4. 46
Ibid., 74. 47 Ibid., 67.
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It is also important to understand how Gannett’s Rochester media monopoly operated.
Despite the fact they shared the same owner and to an extent the same editorial polices, in both
claim and in practice, the D & C and T-U operated as separate organizations. As stated before,
the D & C served the morning readership, the T-U the afternoon. But the differences went
beyond just time of day.48 Outside of using the same printing facilities, the two dailies rarely
collaborated on anything. Each had its own editor and staff-ranking structures and functioning
from separate offices until 1959.49 According to Brennan, the T-U was considered as Rochester’s
“paper of record,” whereas the D & C was more of a “writer’s paper.”50 Gerling put it more
colorfully: “The Times-Union right under the ivory tower . . . is only just saved from being hick
town class . . . On the Democrat & Chronicle a far better spirit exists and is reflected in a far
better product. Staffers enjoy working there: the proportion of skilled old-timers and bright
young up and comers is properly divided.”51
Brennan’s interviews with Gannett writers are proof that there was more of a rivalry and
competiveness felt between the papers than any collective spirit. Kaidy recollected: “We had
two newspapers that competed, that feverishly competed. We tried to be first and of course tried
to be the more accurate of the two papers . . . that was a point of pride.”52 T-U writer Charlie
Luckett explained: “We were really rivals-geographically separated. An afternoon paper is at a
disadvantage time wise, we felt they were lazy-they were working for a morning newspaper.”53
Due to this rivalry the tactic known as “scooping,” was intensely pursued. Essentially, reporters
would try to cover as many angles for a story as possible, “not just for objectivity, but to prevent
48 Ibid., 158-159. 49 Ibid. Never stated directly it was 1959 but is easy to discern from the accompanying literature. 50 Brennan, For the Record, 22-25. 51 Gerling, Smugtown, U.S.A. 52
Brennan, For the Record, 39. 53 Ibid., 85.
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the other newspaper from getting a lead on the story.”54 As reporter Tim Connolly remembered:
“One of the fears was that you would have half a story and you couldn’t go with it because that
would open up the door for them to follow up and maybe get a bigger story.”55 It was due to this
competitive nature that former employees of both dailies contended that despite public disbelief,
it actually resulted in better, more accurate, albeit politically-biased news reporting. In addition,
they felt the 1940s-1960s to be the period when the two newspapers were at the peak of their
civic influence.56
The Front Section’s “Paper Curtain”57
Because public opinion in our country is largely created and shaped by the mass media, the news services assume a crucial significance in the formation of a policy towards Cuba . . . The little that has appeared in the daily newspapers or mass-market magazines, has been distorted . . . On the basis of the mass media, to be intelligently informed about Cuba would be impossible- Maurice Zeitlin and Robert Scheer, 1963.58
The sports section played an influential role in creating the modern layout for many a
daily newspaper. This role is too often ignored by academics who feel that sports history is
insignificant if not irrelevant when compared with “real” history. The same is true when
examining an average local newspaper’s structure: the sporting news is relegated to its own
section away from the “real” important issues facing the community, country, and globe.59
Senzel described that politics, not sports, dictated what section of the news he read: “Baseball
was a part of my life that had been rejected.”60 Even in a historic sporting town such as
54 Ibid., 112. 55 Ibid., 113. 56 Ibid., 7. 57 Maurice Zeitlin and Robert Scheer, Cuba, Tragedy in Our Hemisphere (New York: Grove Press, 1963), 283-284. 58 Ibid. 59 Ibid. 60 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 27.
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Rochester, N.Y., any in-depth athletic coverage frequently could not be found on the front pages
during the 1950s and 1960s.61
But, sports did feature in both the D & C and the T-U outside of the designated sporting
sections. The Red Wings home opener always received substantial first page coverage, as did
every postseason contest.62 Other local professional teams, mainly hockey’s Rochester
Americans, also were covered to a similar extent.63 Both IL and MLB score-lines were almost
always printed, usually in a bottom corner, on each daily’s opening page.64 Major sporting
events such as the Olympics65 and the World Series prominently received front-section
treatment.66 Also, contests featuring one of the three New York MLB teams or the Red Wings
parent club in St. Louis would receive a headline or front page brief quotation on occasion.67
When local Rochester sports hero and New York Giants pitcher Johnny Antonelli figured
prominently in a contest, he sometimes appeared outside the sports section.68 For the most part,
however, local sports, especially away-contests, were limited to the two sporting sections and the
editorial page. It was not “real” news. In fact, when George Beahon wrote several front pages
articles on the ongoing Cuban crisis, the D & C editors took great lengths to inform the reader he
was only a “baseball reporter.”69 This newspaper dichotomy was the primary basis for this
second section.
61 T-U and D & C archives, 1954-1960. 62 Ibid. 63 Evan Nagel, “They Should Have Their Heads Examined: How the Democrat and Chronicle Repackaged & Resold Rochester, New York on Minor League Hockey” (Independent Research Study, Western University, 2013). 64 T-U and D & C archives, 1954-1960. 65 Ibid. I judged this on coverage involving the 1956 and 1960 Summer Olympiads. 66 Ibid. This was and still is common for many American newspapers. 67 Ibid. Of the three teams at the time (The New York Yankees, New York Giants, and Brooklyn Dodgers,) the Giants seemed to be the sentimental favorite amongst Rochestarians. 68 Ibid. Ads for the Firestone dealership Antonelli owned, with a picture of him on the mound, frequently appeared in both Rochester papers. 69 George Beahon, “U.S.-Cuba Gap Widens Daily; Reds Pour In,” D & C, 28 June 1960.
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The goal of this second section was to establish how Cuba, under Batista, during its
subsequent Revolution, and during Castro’s initial years in charge, were presented in both the D
& C and the T-U outside the sporting pages. To do this I separated the front page/local coverage
into yearly segments. Each segment then underwent a quantitative/thematic examination, with
two important details impacting each analysis.
The first or quantitative portion of the study, took into account how often Cuban stories
appeared on Rochester’s newspaper front pages and local sections. This portion does not include
any extensive original charts or equations, only simple notation of how often the “Pearl of the
Antilles” received non-sporting attention. However, during the section’s latter part, which
covered 1959-1960, a 1963 quantitative study conducted by Maurice Zeitlin and Robert Scheer
was thematically compared to my findings.70
The second or thematic portion analyzed the tone of each respective D & C/T-U Cuba-
focused article printed outside the sports pages. The vast majority of the pieces were not written
by Gannett staffers; they were usually taken from the Associated Press, United Press
International, and other nationally available press services.71 However, the editors in charge of
both dailies were responsible for deciding what appeared within their respective final editions.
As such, even when a column was not written by local writers, this study considered it to be a
part of Gannett’s overall message. The editorial section, where the few Rochester-based
statements were printed, was particularly scrutinized. This study also focused upon instances
where baseball notably impacted representations of Cuba outside of the two dailies’ sports
section. Since the sportswriters were the only ones consistently writing about the island and its
70 Zeitlin, Cuba, Tragedy in Our Hemisphere, 285-292. 71
T-U and D & C archives, 1956-1960.
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relationship to Rochester, how their coverage filtered into the rest of the paper took on pertinent
importance regarding this study.
Another Day in Paradise
1954-1957
If one did not read the local sports section during the baseball season, a 1954
Rochesterian could easily have been unaware that Cuba existed, let alone that it was a cultural
and historical American ally.72 Outside of the sports sections, the Rochester dailies only printed
two articles clearly about Cuba in 1954. On 23 June, the T-U published an AP article on Page
Two entitled: “Latin American Governments Neutral, but Anti-U.S. Groups Active.” In that
article, Batista and other Latin American leaders’ opinions on a civil war then raging in
Guatemala were listed and explained.73 On 15 August, the D & C’s morning edition ran a Page
Fifteen UPI story which proclaimed: “President Batista of Cuba Steps Down to Run Legally.”74
That day was a Sunday, and only the D & C printed Sunday editions. However, none of the next
six T-U issues featured this story or any other Cuba-related pieces.75
In both dailies, neither the Red Wings 1954 exhibition series against the Sugar Kings in
early April, their first regular season games in Havana in late April,76 nor their early May
contests against them in Rochester, warranted coverage outside of the sports section. Both the T-
U and the D & C’s sporting pages featured articles on each of these events. In contrast, both
newspapers featured front page stories about the Red Wings’ home opener against Richmond in 72 T-U and D & C archives, 1954. 73 AP, “Latin American Governments Neutral, but Anti-U.S. Groups Active,” T-U, 23 June 1954. 74 UPI, “President Batista of Cuba Steps Down to Run Legally,” D & C, 15 August 1954. 75
T-U archives, 15-21 August 1954. 76 T-U and D & C archives, 1 April-31 May 1954. Said exhibition contest was a four-game series in Merida, Yucatan, Mexico.
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late April.77 Yet, the very next week, outside of IL scorelines, there was no evidence other than
the sports section that Havana was playing at Red Wing Stadium.78 In fact, the only front page
baseball article during that entire week was a 3 May AP piece run by the D & C about MLB St.
Louis outfielder Stan Musial.79 Baseball was occasionally featured on the editorial page, notably
a 7 April column entitled: “The Meaning of America . . . Baseball: Our Token of Power.”80
However, Cuba, even via “beisbol,” was not considered newsworthy outside of the sports
sections.
One thing to make clear is that the D & C and T-U’s lack of articles on Cuba was not
because of a simple U.S.-Latin American public interest gap. Other Latin American nations
received substantial front page and editorial coverage in Rochester dailies during 1954. From
early June to mid-July, Rochester was bombarded with front page stories, editorials, and even
political cartoons focused on the Guatemalan crisis. Alleged communist infiltration into
Guatemala’s government, the subsequent right-wing civil war/ military coup, and its immediate
aftermath garnered significant article space in both newspapers.81 This 22 June D & C cartoon
not only summarizes the extent to which this issue dominated both dailies’ headlines, but also
Latin American stereotypes that ran through Gannett’s portrayal:82
77 Al C. Weber, “Wings Take on Richmond: 10,000 See Opener,” T-U, 29 April 1954. 78 T-U and D & C archives, 1-7 May 1954. 79 AP, “Musial Slams 5 Homers for Doubleheader Record,” D & C, 3 May 1954. 80 John Coleman, “The Meaning of America . . . Baseball: Our Token of Power,” T-U, 7 April 1954. 81 T-U and D & C archives, 1 June-31 July 1954. 82
“Where the Shoe Pinches,” D & C Editorial Page, 22 June 1954.
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Political upheavals in Paraguay, Brazil, Colombia, Nicaragua, and a few other nations in
the region also received significant if comparatively brief coverage.83
Between the two Rochester dailies, outside of the sporting pages there was one article
about Cuba in 1955. On the front page of the D & C’s local news section, the 5 April headline
declared: “Factory Makes Giant Sugar Mill for Cuba.” Accompanied by a picture showing the
mill’s construction, the article touted how Rochester’s Consolidated Machine Tool Co. helped
the Cuban economy. The story concluded: “The sugar cane harvest starts in July, and that’s
when the mill is scheduled to start rolling.”84 In addition, there were several advertisements in
later issues of both newspapers that told locals to: “visit sunny Havana.”85 At this point, it would
seem that Cuba’s sole quality in the eyes of Rochesterians was either as an extension of the
American economy or as a “so near and yet so foreign” tourist destination.86 Neither daily
covered Fidel Castro’s mid-May release from prison or his subsequent flight into exile.
83 T-U and D & C archives, 1 June-31 July 1954. 84 “Factory Makes Giant Sugar Mill for Cuba,” D & C, 5 April 1955. 85
T-U and D & C archives, April-August 1955. 86 Pérez Jr., On Becoming Cuban, 172. The quote is from a 1920s postcard.
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Gannett’s Flower City readership was also kept in the dark regarding the very vocal anti-Batista
student movement in Havana.87
Cuban baseball received the same Rochester non-sports section coverage it had in 1954.
Outside of the IL scorelines on the front page, only one relevant article appeared in either the D
& C or the T-U. The day the Red Wings played their first home contest against Havana, a small
headline ran across the opening page of the latter daily: “Wings, Fans There, but Not Sugar
Kings.” The article simply detailed a misunderstanding the Kings’ manager Reggie Otero,] had
regarding the start time of the game, along with a recap of the first two innings of play.88
Compared to the other IL teams, the Cuban franchise received neither more nor less front page
coverage in Rochester newspapers. In fact, outside of the mid-season replacement of Red Wings
Manager Harry “The Hat” Walker with his brother Fred “Dixie” Walker, reported on the front-
page of both dailies, local baseball received no out-of-the-ordinary coverage.89 Baseball and
Cuba were not enough to generate headline-worthy stories.
In the sports sections, Cuba was receiving some in-depth coverage with T-U baseball
writer Al C. Weber90 and his D & C counterpart George Beahon, each focusing on the
differences between the Cuban and American games. In an 8 August sports section column,
Beahon dedicated its entirety to defending the Sugar Kings’ alleged “unfair” home field
advantages. In it, the D & C writer declared:
At hand is an urgent request from a Columbus, Ohio, newspaper friend to file a few words on why the Havana Sugar Kings beat the brains out of all International League foes who venture into Cuba. Up to date figures on the Cubans- 1955 won-lost record, before today’s activity- show the Cuban Petes are “running pool” on the opposition. They had lost only 14 of 65 home assignments . . . There is nothing illuminating in reminding the customers that visiting 87 T-U and D & C archives, April-October 1955. 88 Al C. Weber, “Wings, Fans There, but Not Sugar Kings,” T-U, 7 May 1955. 89 Al C. Weber, “Dixie Walker New Wing Pilot; ‘The Hat’ gets Stankys’ Job.” T-U, 28 May 1955.This was due to St. Louis Manager Eddie Stanky being fired and the Cardinals called Walker up to replace him. 90 Al C. Weber, “Clarks Going Up, Whisenant to Wings?” T-U, 10 June 1955. There was likely a Cuban-themed line above Clark’s but it was cut off in my scan.
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teams claim adverse effects from the long plane trips to Havana. Everyone has heard about the terrible psychological effect of the weird music in Gran Stadium . . . Even the peculiar lighting in cavernous Gran Stadium has been blamed after poor hitting performances . . . We have heard all the wailing about the hazards of playing in Havana. What, I ask, about the hazards to Havana in bringing an almost exclusively Latin American cast into the United States and Canada . . . My theory is that Havana is a fine ballclub that plays to its full potential on the road- and for BETTER reasons than seven other teams can find for losing in Havana.91
Beahon expressed distaste for the complaints and stereotyping lobbed at the Sugar Kings
by their IL colleagues, pointing out that the cultural shock the Cubans faced when playing
outside the island was far worse. Unlike many of his colleagues, he exposed yet did not mock the
language barrier many Latin players dealt with when they travelled the United States and
Canada. He showed cultural understanding towards Cuba, if only through the lens of baseball.
To at least one Rochester writer, the potential for a Cuban-American baseball bond was indeed
present. However, this American-Cuban baseball bridge continued to be ignored on Rochester’s
front pages.
Other Latin American countries featured prominently on the front pages and in the
editorial sections. The main Gannett focus on the region centered upon growing unrest in Juan
Peron-led Argentina. During July and August alone, the two months leading up to Peron’s
overthrow and flight into exile, the D & C published twenty articles about the Argentinian crisis.
The T-U printed eighteen in comparison.92 While Argentina did not feature as prominently in
political cartoons as Guatemala had the previous year, there was still an attempt to present a
company, if not civic position, on the latest Latin American flare-up.
For the two Rochester dailies, 1956 was an intriguing year from several perspectives.
First, stories about Cuba were featured on a semi-regular basis in the T-U, throughout April,
91 George Beahon, “In This Corner,” D & C, 8 August 1955. 92
T-U and D & C archives, 1 July-31 August 1955.
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May, and isolated instances during the summer.93 On 4 April, a Page Two AP article
proclaimed: “Cuba Nips Plot by Military…army officers face court martial today, accused of
participating in an abortive plot against President Fulgencio Batista.”94 After almost a month of
silence, a 24 April quotation appeared entitled: “Anti-Americans Stone 2 More Firms in
Havana.”95 Six days later, the T-U’s front page blared: “With Revolt Over, Cuba Frees Ex-
Leader.” Within the attached AP article, it mentioned Carlos Príos had been freed twenty-four
hours after Batista’s army crushed a civilian revolt in Matanzas Province.96 On Page Seven the
next day, the afternoon edition declared: “Cuba Suspends Civil Liberties after Crushed
Rebellion.”97 The same day this cartoon ran:98
.
The 2 May edition’s Page Twenty-one included the headline: “Cuban Congress Okays
Revolt Curbs.”99 Ten days later, Page Four of the T-U, via the AP declared: “Cuban Stormy
Petrel Back in Miami Exile,” in which Príos alleged he had been deported by the island’s
93 T-U archives, 1 April-31 August 1956. 94 AP, “Cuba Nips Plot by Military,” T-U, 5 April 1956. 95 AP, “Anti-Americans Stone Two More Firms in Havana,” T-U, 24 April 1956. 96 AP, “With Revolt Over, Cuba Frees Ex-Leader,” T-U, 30 April 1956. 97 AP, “Cuba Suspends Civil Liberties after Crushed Rebellion,” T-U, 1 May 1956. 98
“Last-Minute Instructions,” T-U Editorial Page, 1 May 1956. 99 AP, “Cuban Congress Okays Revolt Curbs,” T-U, 2 May 1956.
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national police.100 After that the afternoon daily went silent about Cuba until late June. On 26
June’s Page Six, underneath a large article entitled: “4 Guatemalan Students Killed: Army is Put
in Control”101 and next to one proclaiming: “Brazil Seizes Would-Be Assassin,”102 the T-U
announced: “Mexico Nabs 20 Cubans.” The article focused on a raid the Mexican police
launched against Fidel Castro’s guerilla camp just outside Mexico City.103 The next day, the
story was followed up on a Page Seven piece entitled: “17 More Held in Plot on Batista.”104 For
the rest of the year. however, outside of the sports section, the T-U remained silent about Cuban
matters.
The D & C coverage on Cuba was slightly different. Rochester’s morning daily printed
no stories about the island outside of the sports section, with one exception. On 23 May, a Page
Seven story ran with the headline: “Judge Stops Expulsion for Ex-Cuban President.”105 Other
than that no other Cuban-related stories appeared during the study period in 1956. The reasons
for this are likely due to one or a combination of two contributing factors.
First mentioned in For the Record, reporters and writers from both papers were sensitive
to the urge to “scoop” or from being “scooped” themselves. Since in 1956 Cuba’s political
unrest was only commencing to become noticeable to the average American newsman, the T-U
staff perhaps simply scooped this angle off the AP wire over the D & C. Second, most of these
incidents occurred when the Wings and Kings played each other, and it is possible that the D &
C felt that Cuba didn’t warrant any coverage outside the sports section.106 Beahon of the D & C
mentioned political tensions in a handful of his 1956 columns, and perhaps that constituted an
100 AP, “Cuban Stormy Petrel Back in Miami Exile,” T-U, 12 May 1956. 101 AP, “4 Guatemalan Students Killed; Army is Put in Control,” T-U, 26 June 1956. 102 AP, “Brazil Seizes Would-Be Assassin,” T-U, 26 June 1956. 103 AP, “Mexico Nabs 20 Cubans,” T-U, 26 June 1956. 104 AP, “17 More Held in Plot on Batista,” T-U, 27 June 1956. 105 AP, “Judge Stops Expulsion for Ex-Cuban President,” D & C, 23 May 1956. 106 D & C archives, Sports Section, April-October 1956.
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“unscooped” angle on the Cuban situation, erasing the need for additional articles.107 Thanks to
the T-U sources, it is indisputable that coverage of Cuba noticeably increased in at least one
Rochester newspaper. Relevant articles that appeared in the 1956 editions of the afternoon daily
alone outnumbered those from the preceding two years of both the D & C and the T-U.
Cuban baseball appeared out of the sporting pages four times, at least according to the
scans. On 20 April, the D & C published the beginning of a Beahon article entitled: “Wings
Tame Havana for Seasons 1st Win,” which covered Rochester’s home opener.108 Al C. Weber
wrote a similar quotation for the T-U two days prior.109 On 2 May, the D & C published an
above-the-fold Beahon piece under the headline: “Wings to Meet Havana in Home Opener
Today.”110 The T-U also printed a front-page write-up about the contest.111 While the D & C
columnist described Havana in detail, nothing emerged to differentiate the squad from the
American or Canadian teams in the IL outside of simply calling them: “Havana’s swift and
daring Sugar Kings” and “Reggie Otero’s Cubans.”112 Conversely, when the T-U’s afternoon
edition hit the newsstands that same day, at least two innings of the game had already been
completed.113 As a result, the article was much shorter, and did not contain any differentiating
remarks regarding either Cuba or the island’s Sugar Kings. Once again, baseball had failed to
factor into Rochester’s slowly growing coverage of Cuba outside of the sports section. In
contrast, alleged Communist incursions in the rest of Latin America, particularly in right-wing
controlled Argentina,114 received more than their fair share of stories, at least in the T-U.115
107 George Beahon, “In This Corner,” D & C, April-October 1956. 108 George Beahon, “Wings Tame Havana for Seasons 1st Win,” D & C, 18 April 1956. 109 Al C. Weber, “Wings to Use 3 Rookies in Debut Tonight,” T-U, 18 April 1956. 110
George Beahon, “Wings to Meet Havana in Home Opener Today,” D & C, 2 May 1956. 111 Al C. Weber, “Home Runs Enliven Red Wing Opener,” T-U, 2 May 1956. 112 George Beahon, “Wings to Meet Havana in Home Opener Today,” D & C, 2 May 1956. 113 Al C. Weber, “Home Runs Enliven Red Wing Opener,” T-U, 2 May 1956. 114 Also focused upon was Peron’s movement in exile. 115 T-U archives, April-October 1956.
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111
From April through June 1957, Cuba managed to remain almost entirely off Gannett’s
front pages. During this three month period, the D & C only ran three Cuban-related pieces, all
occurring in the last week of May. On 26 May, a Page Seven story proclaimed: “Cuba Rebels
Hiding in Hills.”116 On 29 May, their front page had a small article entitled: “Rebels Douse
Havana’s Bright Lights.”117 Two days later, a Page Eight AP column proclaimed: “Batista Maps
Out Drive to Wipe-Out Rebels.”118 In comparison, the T-U published only three relevant
articles. On 10 May, a Page Two brief quotation, referring to three American youths who fled
Guantanamo Bay in March to join Castro’s forces, declared: “Two Quit Rebels, Third Stays.”119
On 29 May, under a photograph of a burning building, the front page headline proclaimed:
“Cuba Battle Erupts: Saboteurs Hit Havana.”120 Lastly, on 4 June, the T-U printed a story
entitled: “3 Bombs Explode in Havana.” In none of these articles was baseball discussed.121
Ironically, these three months featured large amounts of Latin American coverage. Both
dailies were extensive in informing their respective readerships about important events in the
region. Border skirmishes between the Honduran and Nicaraguan militaries received mention.122
The ouster of Colombian president Gustavo Rojas due to a 10 May coup d’état also featured on
Gannett’s front pages.123 Haiti was by far the most covered Latin American nation during this
period, as the island’s citizens experienced violent protests, military suppression, and contested
elections.124 During this three month period, the D & C printed at least thirteen Haiti-related
116 AP, “Cuba Rebels Hiding in Hills,” D & C, 26 May 1957. 117 AP, “Rebels Douse Havana’s Bright Lights,” D & C, 29 May 1957. 118 AP, “Batista Maps Out Drive to Wipe-Out Rebels,” D & C, 31 May 1957. 119
AP, “Two Quits Rebels, Third Stays,” T-U, 10 May 1957. 120 AP, “Cuba Battle Erupts; Saboteurs Hit Havana,” T-U, 29 May 1957. 121 AP, “3 Bombs Explode in Havana,” T-U, 4 June 1967. 122 T-U and D & C archives, 1 April-31 July 1957. 123 Richard G. Massock, “Colombia Dictator Swept from Power,” T-U, 10 May 1957. 124 This eventually culminated in the September elections of Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier, who ruled Haiti with an iron fist until 1971.
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articles.125 In contrast, the T-U ran fifteen. However, in the following two months, Cuba started
to feature prominently in both newspapers in areas outside the sporting sections.126 This negated
any further examination of Gannett’s coverage involving other Latin American nations as far as
the study is concerned, as a definable Cuban position emerged.
While the D & C failed to print any narratives on Cuba in July, their afternoon
competition at the T-U more than compensated. On 1 July a Page Four AP article appeared
entitled: “5 Killed as Cuban Rebels Riot after Peace Rally.”127 Five days later Page Two was
headed by a picture of an explosion, along with the caption: “Blasts Hit Cuba.”128 On 11 July a
full page column written by AP writer Larry Allen proclaimed: “Cuba’s Wave of Prosperity
Rolls, Freedom Ebbs.” This article is extremely significant as it marked the first occasion either
newspaper published an opinion piece regarding the Cuban situation. Allen wrote: “Cubans are
riding high, wide, and handsome on a wave of lush prosperity . . . It doesn’t wash out a burning
desire for basic freedoms . . . Today only tight gun rule seems to be keeping most of Cuba from
erupting into shooting revolt . . . Cuba’s constitution guarantees basic liberties . . . But the laws
that protect seem only to be applied at the convenience of the government.”129 After 15 July,
when a Page Six AP quotation informed the readership: “Cuba Rebel Bombs Mar Invasion,” the
T-U went silent until the beginning of August.130 When they picked up the narrative again, they
were no longer alone.
For the first half of August, nine different days featured at least one story about Cuba
between the two Rochester dailies. On 2 August a Page Three T-U article proclaimed: “Army
125 D & C archives, 1 April-30 June, 1957. 126
T-U archives, 1 April-30 June, 1957. 127 AP, “5 Killed as Cuban Rebels Riot after ‘Peace Rally’,” T-U, 1 July 1957. 128 AP, “Blasts Hit Cuba,” T-U, 6 July 1958. 129 Larry Allen, “Cuba’s Wave of Prosperity Rolls, Freedom Ebbs,” T-U, 11 July 1957. 130 AP, “Cuba Rebel Bombs Mar ‘Invasion’,” T-U, 15 July 1957.
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Holds Cuba under Military Rule.”131 The next day their afternoon edition began on Page Two
with the headline: “Cuban Bill Assails U.S. Envoy.”132 The D & C’s Page Three from that
morning ran two AP Cuba-focused articles side by side. The first read: “Cuban Rebels to Clash
with Batista.”133 The second and much larger of the two was entitled: “U.S. Envoy’s (Earl T.
Smith) Visit to Rebel City Studied for Diplomatic Blunder.”134 On 4 August the D & C’s Page
Six printed a quotation from the AP wire that read: “U.S. Envoy Flies Back to Havana, Mute on
Charges.”135 The front page of the 5 August T-U stated: “Cuba Rebels Push War of Nerves.”136
Another AP quotation underneath that column announced: “Eleven “Propaganda” letters
addressed to Red Wings players were received today from Rebel-agitated Cuba. Details on page
34.”137 This was only one of two instances in 1957 where the Cuban Revolution and Red Wings
baseball were mentioned together outside the sports section. The second and more notable of the
two, occurred six days later.
On 11 August, the D & C’s front page headline blared: “What is the Real Situation in
Cuba? Rebel Bombings . . .Censorship . . . ‘Stay Home’ Squeeze by Natives.” The attached
article, promoted as “A Report from the Scene by D & C baseball writer George Beahon,” was
the first time a local opinion on Cuba featured prominently in either newspaper. Beahon
described a striking scene:
Sweltering Havana is a giant powder keg waiting to be fused by rebel leader Fidel Castro, the elusive attorney-turned warrior. Cubans are a strange breed of cats, reluctant to talk, unwilling to show emotion or feelings about their government. They whistle wildly over a bonehead baseball play and flip madly over an umpire’s decision. Politics and revolutions they
131 AP, “Army Holds Cuba under Military Rule,” T-U, 2 August 1957. 132 AP, “Cuban Bill Assails U.S. Envoy,” T-U, 3 August 1957. 133
AP, “Cuban Rebels to Clash with Batista,” D & C, 3 August 1957. 134 AP, “U.S. Envoy’s Visit to Rebel City Studied for Diplomatic Blunder,” D & C, 3 August 1957. Parenthesis mine. The named rebel city was Santiago. 135 AP, “U.S. Envoy Flies Back to Havana, Mute on Charges,” D & C, 4 August 1957. 136 AP, “Cuba Rebels Push War of Nerves,” T-U, 5 August 1957. 137
Ibid. Both dailies ran sport section stories on this incident, but only Beahon at the D & C wrote an in-person account, as he was travelling with the Red Wings when they received the letters in Miami.
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hesitate to discuss, giving an impression that no one can be trusted . . . No one openly admits sympathy for Castro. On the other hand, there is little open criticism except from the government-controlled press. Censorship and suppression of news in . . . Havana is exactly what you’d expect under a dictatorship . . . copy sent from Havana by wire services is strictly censored. All phone calls are monitored.
Beahon then recounted a personal incident:
In the press box in Gran Stadium . . . this reporter typed sidebar notes (about a bombing at a Havana Woolworth Department Store) . . . This copy was passed along to the cable operator who promptly let out a howl and called a meeting of his teletype colleagues. One who spoke English brought the copy back to me and said . . . ‘We wish you not to write anything about the situation here-for your sake and for ours. You are under censorship the same as everybody else.’ Well the office picks up the tab for these trips, but this does not include bail money, and the airline insurance does not cover risk of acquiring tropical crud in the Cuban pokey. So no serious attempt was made to beat the censors. Starting then, off-field distractions no longer appeared of earth shattering importance. Even though Cot Deal pitched a complete game that included pauses to estimate how far away from the bark the bombs were exploding. (One’s concussion actually was felt in the stadium, three cramped blocks from the theater it blew out.)138
The D & C baseball writer concluded the two page article with a particularly baseball-
themed focus:
More than 10,000 of the Cubans now living in Florida are reported contributing to Castro’s campaign and would love to see some of the Batista mob ventilated. . . Batista must stick and stay and hope it pays. Club-owner Bobby Maduro pays his bills and is prepared to fight an anticipated drive to force Havana out of the International League so long as the political situation is not cleared . . . Batista,” claims Maduro, “has the Cuban Negro population on his side and his is 35 per cent of our country. He also has the labor leaders and of course he has the Army. When you have the Army you are the boss.”139
This article revealed several important states of the American-Cuban bonding dynamic, at
least as portrayed in the Rochester press. First, the Cuban Revolution was now considered to be
important enough to warrant front-page coverage. Second, the lens of baseball was indeed being
utitlized to gain access to such stories, and to portray them to the Rochester readership in a
familiar setting. Aspects such as censorship, bombings, and political protests were not common
events at Red Wings games, so this overlap with a baseball contest showed to the public that
138 First parenthesis mine, second is Beahon’s. 139 George Beahon, “What is the Real Situation in Cuba?” D & C, 11 August 1957.
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something was amiss in Cuba. However the most important revelation was that even the bond of
baseball was not enough to keep the Cuban Revolution on the front page for long, showing the
weakness the sport had as a cultural lens.
The rest of August featured two more articles outside of the sport section, both in the T-
U.140 Coverage briefly picked up again in early September following the failed Cienfuegos
uprising. The D & C printed seven Cuban-focused pieces and the T-U printed five, respectively.
However, by the middle of the month, Cuba fell out of each of the front sections for the
remainder of the baseball season.141 Yet, when Red Wing training camp began in the spring of
1958, the island had become permanently attached to both the D & C’s and T-U’s front pages.
As this study’s findings for the last three seasons show, this was not because of baseball. The
American-Cuban baseball relationship, while undeniably present, was simply along for the ride.
The Pot Boils
1958-1959
The Cuban Revolution received a sharp coverage increase by the two newspapers in
April 1958. With Red Wings spring training almost half-over, the “Pearl of the Antilles” seemed
to be the new headline staple. On 1 April, the T-U’s third page announced via the “Times-Union
Wire Services” that: “Batista Gets Dictator Powers.”142 The D & C’s seventh page that same day
commented: “Cuban Rebels Hit Communications.”143 On 2 April, the morning daily’s Page Two
exclaimed: “Cuban Rebels Kick off Total War on Batista.” 144 The T-U scooped its competitors
that afternoon when it ran a story about the arrest of three Rochester-based businessmen, the
140 T-U and D & C archives, 12 August-31 August 1957. 141 T-U and D & C archives, 1-30 September 1957. 142 “Batista Gets Dictator Powers,” T-U, 1 April 1958. 143
AP, “Cuban Rebels Hit Communications,” D & C, 1 April 1958. 144 AP, “Cuban Rebels Kick Off Total War Against Batista,” D & C, 2 April 1958.
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Bachman brothers, who were charged with smuggling weapons to Castro.145 The next page
published an AP piece entitled: “22 Rebel Supporters Arrested in Miami,” with a photograph
showing Cuban hunger strikers.146 The D & C’s Mitchell Kaidy reported the following day:
“‘Amazing Bachmans’ Face Charges of Supplying Arms to Cuba Rebels.”147 In neither paper
were the Bachmans criticized or praised. The T-U utilized its lead by running a full length
column: “Kill if Necessary, Cuban Workers Told,”148 along with a Page Two article entitled:
“Smuggling Guns to Cuba Big Business.”149 On 4 April the T-U’s headline declared: “Total War
Will Start Tonight, if Necessary says Castro,”150 while the editorial section ran this cartoon:151
During the rest of April, the D & C published twenty-eight Cuba-related stories and the
T-U ran fourteen.152 Headline after headline drew respective readerships into the ongoing island
crisis. In this regard, the two papers remained largely consistent with their coverage. On 5 April,
Rochester’s morning daily ran the headline: “Cuban Rebels ‘Total War’ Opens in Ominous
145 “3 Bachmans Indicted in Cuban Arms Plot,” T-U, 2 April 1958. The brothers were Stanley J., Jerome H., and Bernard S. Their case was declared a mistrial subsequent to a hung jury. 146 AP, “22 Rebel Supporters Arrested in Miami,” T-U, 2 April 1958. 147 Mitchell Kaidy, “‘Amazing Bachmans’ Face Charges of Supplying Arms to Cuban Rebels,” D & C, 3 April 1958. 148 AP, “Kill if Necessary, Cuban Workers Told,” T-U, 3 April 1958. 149 AP, “Smuggling Guns to Cuba Big Business,” T-U, 3 April 1958. 150 AP, “Total War Will Start Tonight, if Necessary says Castro,” T-U, 4 April 1958. 151
“A Hurricane That Will Bear Watching,” T-U Editorial Section, 4 April 1958. 152 T-U and D & C archives, 5-30 April 1958.
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Silence as Batista Readies Troops.”153 The following day, the front page featured a full length
AP column entitled: “Castro Forces Now Isolated, Cubans Claim.”154 On 8 April, Page Three
reported: “Police in Havana Arrest 26 Men in Fight on Rebels,”155 and 9 April’s Page Seven
commented: “Cuba Civic Resistance Movement Claims Thousands Oppose Army.”156 The next
day, the opening headline declared: “Havana Crushes Rebel Uprising: Batista Opens Counter
Offensive.” Two other Cuban-centered articles appeared alongside a photograph of a fire-
engulfed Havana street.157 The D & C’s 11 April front page announced: “Cuban Rebels Fail in
Second Uprising.”158 Also that day the morning daily printed an op-ed editorial on the Cuban
situation, the only one in either newspaper in April. The unauthored piece, entitled “Cuba’s
Warning,” posed the following:
As rebel and government forces in Cuba spill blood in scattered clashes across the island, the American bystander is put in a curious position. Choosing sides isn’t easy. Fidel Castro and his abortive uprising aren’t likely to draw much American sympathy. Castro’s cause has won the sympathy of Cuba’s few Communists. For years Castro has behaved in a manner to suggest that he is a Red or a fellow traveler. As for Batista, his rule is a dictatorship rating as only slightly the better of two bad choices . . . Batista was elected president under a new constitution adopted in 1940, and was renamed president for another 4-year term in 1954 . . . in an election in which he was the only candidate . . . Under the terms of the Platt Amendment the United States could intervene “for the preservation of Cuban independence.” At least four times the U.S. intervened in Cuban insurrections. But not since the amendment was abrogated in 1934. Now its policy is “hands-off.” This isn’t Russia, which sent tanks and guns into a satellite to quell a revolt. At the moment the threat of a Communist coup in . . . Cuba, is remote but the possibility exists. Cuba may be warning us to intensify our propaganda program for freedom in the Western Hemisphere.159 Putting aside the writer’s assumptions on Castro’s political affilations, this article
revealed a disturbing trend about Rochester’s view of Cuba. The Platt Amendment was brought
up as a potential solution if a Communist coup were to unfold on the island, showing a sense of 153 AP, “Cuban Rebels ‘Total War’ Opens in Ominous Silence as Batista Readies Troops,” D & C, 5 April 1958. 154 AP, “Castro Forces Now Isolated, Cubans Claim,” D & C, 6 April 1958. 155 AP, “Police in Havana Arrest 26 Men in Fight on Rebels,” D & C, 8 April 1958. 156 AP, “Cuban Civic Resistance Movement Claims Thousands Oppose Army,” D & C, 9 April 1958. 157 AP, “Havana Crushes Rebel Uprising; Batista Opens Counter Offensive,” D & C, 10 April 1958. 158
AP, “Cuban Rebels Fail in Second Uprising,” D & C, 11 April 1958. 159 “Cuba’s Warning,” D & C, 11 April, 1958.
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how Cuba best served American interests, and not how they both could best serve each other. .
Although the author reminded the readers that “this isn’t Russia,” the suggestion was that
nothing should be taken off the table regarding, “our . . . program for freedom.” It was under this
attitude that the next few months of the Revolution was portrayed in the Rochester press.
The next day a D & C front page headline proclaimed: “Dynamite Blasted by Rebels in
Cuba after Swift Foray.”160 An opening AP article on 13 April was entitled: “Cuban Revolt
Fizzles as Dissension Splits Havana Rebel Chiefs.”161 The following morning, two relevant
pieces on the Revolution were printed on Page Three.162 On 15 April, a front page story
declared: “Cuban Rebels Land on Coast for 2d Front.”163 On 16 April, a Page Two AP quotation
announced: “Rebels Shoot-Up 3 Cuban Towns, Scatter to Hills.”164 On 18 April, a small article
informed readers that: “Castro Shakes up Rebel Commands to Halt Bungling.”165 The next
relevant story appeared on Page Three ten days later. 166 On 29 April, a Page Eleven quotation
commented: “Cuba Calm Ends, Attacks Renewed.”167 The last day of April, a similar-sized
quotation appeared on the front page which claimed: “Rebels Trapped, End of Uprising Seen by
Cubans.”168
For the most part baseball was a negligible influence, at least thematically, upon the two
newspapers’ 1958 April coverage of Cuba, although baseball in relation to Cuba was featured
four times outside the sports sections. The first, written by the T-U’s baseball reporter Al C.
Weber, appeared on the 14 April edition’s front page entitled: “Havana- - Or Else, Bisons Told.”
160 AP, “Dynamite Blasted by Rebels in Cuba after Swift Foray,” D & C, 12 April 1958. 161 AP, “Cuban Revolt Fizzles as Dissention Splits Havana Rebel Chiefs,” D & C, 13 April 1958. 162 Ben Funk, “‘Youth on the Block’ Fights Batista,” D & C, 14 April 1958. 163 AP, “Cuban Rebels Land on Coast for ‘2d Front’,” D & C, 15 April 1958. 164 AP, “Rebels Shoot-Up 3 Cuban Towns, Scatter to Hills,” D & C, 16 April 1958. 165 AP, “Castro Shakes Up Rebel Commands to Halt ‘Bungling’,” D & C, 18 April 1958. 166 AP, “Rebellion Over, says Some Cubans, D & C, 28 April 1958. 167 AP, “Cuba Calm Ends, Attacks Renewed,” D & C, 29 April 1958. 168
AP, “Rebels Trapped, End of Uprising Seen by Cubans,” D & C, 30 April 1958.
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Due to the heightened political tensions and outbreaks of violence during early April, the Buffalo
Bisons’ players voted not to play their season opening series in Havana, even under threat of
forfeiting those games. Weber commented:
The directors, in an emergency meeting here yesterday, voted 7-0 to maintain its original schedule. Buffalo although invited to attend, was not represented. However, Buffalo through club president John Stigimeir, announced it would “stand by the action taken by its Executive Committee Apr. 12 and will not send its club to Havana . . . If Buffalo forfeits its games there, the Wings will be the first league team to appear in strife-torn Cuba. George Sisler, representing Rochester, after hearing assurances from Maduro that there was no risk involved . . . voted to maintain the schedule. The meeting heard other assurances relayed by League President Frank Shaughnessy from Earl T. Smith, US ambassador to Cuba . . . Maduro read a telegram signed by six American-born players on his team and one umpire, Augie Guglielmo. It said they had played six exhibition games in Moron . . . 300 miles closer to the main trouble spot at Santiago than Havana, without incident or harassment of any kind . . . He said he would not transfer his games to Tampa, because conditions “are better in Havana now than at any time in two years.” Thus the Diamond Jubilee opening of the International League, oldest of the minors, appears a bit tarnished at the moment.169
Unlike Beahon, Weber made little-attempt outside of “strife-torn Cuba,” to explore the
revolution in-depth, seemingly content to simply discuss the baseball side of the equation. This
pattern also appeared throughout his sport section articles, as after 1957, Weber stopped
travelling to Cuba with the Red Wings, thereby shrinking the baseball window Rochester had to
the island’s revolution.
The second was a Letter to the Editor that appeared on the D & C’s 18 April editorial
page, which essentially declared any American-Cuban relationship via baseball as a fraudulent
one. The letter proclaimed:
As I write this the internal situation in Cuba is to say the least, uncertain. The opinions I express are non-political for my views are strictly concerned with baseball. Incidentally, I have
169 Al C. Weber, “Havana- - or Else, Bisons Told,” T-U, 14 April 1958. On 5 April, Beahon had printed in the D & C sports section brief individual Red Wing responses to the question whether or not they would be up to travel to Havana. Most said they were “leery,” but would go if they had to. However, Beahon quoted the lone Latin American questioned, Puerto Rican third baseman Tony Alomar, as saying, “Si, I go. Why no go?” George Beahon, “Red Wings Don’t Relish Playing in Havana,” D & C, 4 April 1958.
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always scoffed at reports that it is also Cuba’s national pastime. Obviously, the Batista and Castro forces have other ideas. I cannot believe our George Sisler would be a part of a mandate to the Buffalo Bisons that they must enter Havana to open the baseball season midst the very definite risk of injury to personnel directly involved in the business of baseball, the players . . . Don’t they (IL Board of Governors) consider the entire island of Cuba a warzone battleground? Or do they think that Gran Stadium will be allowed to remain a playground? I feel that baseball players earn their livelihood in the game of baseball, not . . . as soldiers in wartime. I believe Mr. Sisler should explain his stand (which I cannot fathom as being his true feelings) to the fandom of the local team who subscribed to save baseball here, not to feed it to the rebels of Cuba. And just what are the feelings of the stockholders- the owners of the Wings?- SEBASTIAN J. FICHERA, 176 Fulton Ave.170
This revealed how little at least one Rochesterian viewed the American-Cuban baseball
bond: barely existent. If the majority of Red Wings fans shared his views, then no matter how
positively Beahon may have covered the bridge, its ability to serve the greater good would have
been largely lacking.
The third was a surprise George Beahon column featured on the opening page of the D &
C’s 16 April local news section, entitled, Everybody’s Business. Beahon, amongst other baseball
reflections, opined:
Spring training is many things to a ballplayer. And many things also to a writer . . . It is the constant, conflicting series of reports-hearsay, rumor, censored stories-about what’s happening in Havana, where your ballclub has to appear before you get home . . . It is wondering whether your insurance is effective in Havana . . . It is talking with newsman who are forced to fly daily from Havana to Miami in order to avoid censorship: but are censored by restriction in their every movement under the martial law of Cuba.171
The final front page Cuban baseball entry was a second edition of Beahon’s Everybody’s
Business on 23 April. This one entitled: “Nothing Doing,” attempted to portray the Havana
scene to Rochesterians, as the Wings had played a season series there over the weekend. Beahon
articulated:
In Miami one day last week a carload of Fidel Castro supporters celebrated the opening of the baseball season in their native Havana by massaging a Cuba legislator with Louisville sluggers . . . In Havana the same night Cuban government censors celebrated the opener by blue-
170
Sebastian J. Fichera, “‘Shooting, Baseball Just Don’t Mix,” D & C, 18 April 1958. 171 George Beahon, “Everybody’s Business,” D & C, 16 April 1958.
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penciling this line . . . “Havana tonight was as quiet as a drive-in theatre at high noon. Well, almost” . . . Cuban President Fulgencio Batista clearly won a round two weeks ago when he suppressed the attempt at a general strike. It would appear however . . . tremendous publicity accorded Castro’s disorganized armed revolt has almost completely paralyzed Cuba’s lush tourist trade. In a discount house in midtown Havana, a shopkeeper who does business with visiting ballplayers told me: “I had a full week in which not one customer walked into my shop. There is no reason for it. But that awful publicity and propaganda in the U.S. press ruined us” . . . Thousands of good, average Cuban breadwinners are not winning bread. It’s a national emergency without another shot being fired. And the man on the street has become more inclined to swing his blame away from the government and toward the costly war of nerves being fought by the rebels. Meanwhile, also, three more multi-million dollar tourist traps are in the planning stage in Havana. After all, it’s only money.172 In both of Beahon’s articles, he once again articulated a sense of attempted understanding
between him and the everyday habanos he would come across. Unlike his front-page
counterparts, the “baseball writer” revealed the negative impact American coverage was having
on the Cuban economy, namely the tourist trade. By comparing these two entries with Fichera’s
op-ed piece, it also revealed a potential disconnect between the writer and reader. Unlike
Fichera, Beahon had for the previous four and a half years travelled to Havana on a frequent
basis, experiencing the Cuban spectacle firsthand. With baseball serving as his entryway into this
spectacle, it perhaps also enabled him to understand the average Cuban more accurately and
quickly. Since Fichera had no access to these resources, it is understandable why the bond had
little impact upon his perception of Cuba.
Cuban events, both on and off the baseball diamond, dropped out of the front sections of
the Rochester newspapers for all of May and the majority of June. Neither the D & C nor the T-
U printed a relevant story until 27 June.173 The T-U that day hit newsstands under a banner
reading: “Cuba Rebels Kidnap 10 Americans,” and featured a front page article entitled:
“Engineers Kidnapped in Cuba.”174 The following morning, the D & C trumpeted the headline:
172 George Beahon, “Everybody’s Business,” D & C, 23 April 1958. 173 T-U and D & C archives, 1 May-30 June 1958. 174 AP, “Engineers Kidnapped in Cuba,” T-U, 27 June 1958.
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“Cuban Rebels Kidnap, Hold 10 Americans.”175 These articles unknowingly signalled the
beginning of a much larger hostage crisis, along with a drastic increase in coverage of Cuba. By
the time the crisis ended on 19 July, the two Rochester dailies ran thirty-nine combined stories,
twenty-five in the D & C and fourteen in the T-U.176 While none of the articles mentioned
baseball, it is important to mention that the kidnappings drastically colored local opinion of the
Cuban Revolution. On 3 July a T-U editorial entitled: “Cuban Rebels Lose American
Sympathy,” reported:
Strict censorship by the Cuban government has clouded the real situation. . . The rebels are said to resent the fact that the United States is not providing them with support and that it has been helping the government. In either case it is just as criminal for them to kidnap innocent Americans from their jobs . . . to express this resentment. They display a complete lack of understanding of freedom to resort to such means. Theses kidnappings suggest that the rebels would be no better than the present government.177
A 6 July editorial in the D & C called for Castro to be “slapped,” and labelled the Cuban
rebel leader, a “modern Simon Bolivar.”178 However, an 11 July editorial written by AP
journalist J.M. Roberts contended: “Russia and the East German communists . . . make their
attempts in petty ways. That’s even different from the way it’s done by the Cuban rebels who
wanted foreigners as insurance against government bombs.”179 And yet, as soon as the captured
Americans were returned, both the D & C and the T-U returned to not focusing on Cuba.180
Ironically, the next three months, regarded as the turning point of the Cuban Revolution,
developed the smallest amount of Rochester-Cuba coverage. From the beginning of August until
the end of October, only one relevant article between the two dailies was printed, an 11
175 AP, “Cuban Rebels Kidnap, Hold 10 Americans,” D & C, 28 June 1958. 176 T-U and D & C archives, 29 June-19 July 1958. 177 “Cuban Rebels Lose American Sympathy,” T-U, 3 July 1958. 178 John F. Collins, “Cuban Rebel Leader Should be Slapped,” D & C, 6 July 1958. 179 J.M. Roberts, “Reds Resort to Barbarism with Kidnappings,” D & C, 11 July 1958. The Reds in the article are East Germans who were holding American military pilots hostage. 180 T-U and D & C archives, 19 July-31 October 1958.
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September T-U photo exposé about gun smuggling.181 Cuba had gone from being an island of
global importance to seeming irrelevance as far as Gannett’s newspapers were concerned. This
changed dramatically in the last two months of 1958.
November and December featured extensive front-page coverage of Cuba in both the D
& C and the T-U as twenty articles ran in the morning newspaper, and thirty-two were printed by
their afternoon competitor.182 However, while the two dailies informed Rochester readers about
controversy in the Cuban Presidential election,183 rebel-hijacked airplanes,184 and Castro’s forces
besieging Santa Clara,185 not a single relevant editorial was printed in either one.186 In fact, on
31 December, when T-U Special Services writer William H. Stoneham listed six “restive
explosive situations . . . that are clear to the naked eye as the year begins,” neither Cuba nor
Latin America was mentioned.187 So, while the Revolution increased its coverage in Rochester,
the editors did not hold it to be a “true global crisis.” Seemingly not even the baseball
connection warranted any local press perspective on Cuba. Literally overnight, however, both the
D & C and the T-U were forced to change their Cuban assessment as Batista fled the island and
Castro came to power.
In this chapter’s introduction, I established I would utilize a 1963 quantitative study,
conducted by Zeitlin/Scheer, when thematically analyzing 1959-1960. In this study, the
Washington Post, San Francisco Chronicle, and San Francisco Examiner newspapers were
examined to determine how prominent the Cuban Revolution was featured and portrayed in their
181 “Men, Arms for Cuba, Seized in Florida,” T-U, 11 September 1958. 182 T-U and D & C archives, 1 November-31 December 1958. 183 AP, “Cubans Shun Polls as Voting Begins,” T-U, 3 November 1958. 184 AP, “Cuba Rebels Seize Plane; 17 Killed,” T-U, 3 November 1958. 185 AP, “Cuban War Rages in Two Offensives; Payoff Held Near,” D & C, 29 December 1958. 186 T-U and D & C archives, 1 November-31 December 1958. 187 William H. Stoneham, “Challenge of ’59-A Restive, Possibly Explosive, World,” T-U, 31 December 1958.
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respective coverages.188 The answers Zeitlin/Scheer reached via their quantitative experiments
served as the point/counterpoint to the Rochester analysis, and helped add academic weight to
my study’s primary thematic conclusions. However, two important distinctions must be noted
between their research and my own before going further. First, their study period was divided
into three time frames: 1 January 1959-11 June 1959, 12 June 1959-11 January 1960, and 12
January 1960-7 July 1960. These were chosen due to important events occurring on those
particular dates.189 My analysis was more loosely divided into six time frames: 1 January 1959-
31 March 1959, 1 April 1959-30 June 1959, 1 July 1959-15 August 1959, 16 August 1959-15
October 1959, 1 April 1960-15 June 1960, and 16 June-31 July 1960. These were chosen due to
what I saw as major themes relevant to my study occurring during each designated period.
Lastly, Zeitlin/Scheer came to their quantitative conclusions based on measuring column inches
in their chosen newspapers, whereas I simply counted the number of articles.190
In both the D & C and the T-U, the Cuban Revolution’s immediate aftermath dominated
front-page coverage, albeit steadily decreasing each month. In January, the morning and
afternoon dailies published seventy and sixty-three relevant articles, respectively. The following
two months, the D & C ran twenty-nine Revolution-focused stories and the T-U ran twenty-
seven.191 The “Pearl of the Antilles” had definitively become an event of “global importance, at
least as far as Rochester newspapers were concerned.
While the published pieces ranged through a wide variety of topics, there were two major
narratives that the D & C and T-U focused on, each one representing an issue that a baseball
bridge would have to overcome. The first, featured primarily in January and somewhat in
188 Zeitlin, “Cuba, Tragedy in Our Hemisphere,” 288. 189 Ibid. 190 Ibid., 286-292. For 1959 and 1956 I included relevant political cartoons as articles in my quantitative count. 191 T-U and D & C archives, 1 January-28 February 1959.
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February, had each Rochester newspaper print some editorials praising Castro for deposing
Batista, while simultaneously warning that the head rebel had to prove himself to the “North”
before gaining American support. In a 3 January D & C editorial entitled: “Good for Cuba! (We
Hope),” an unknown writer pontificated:
Let this not be construed as favorable to Gen. Fulgencio Batista . . . His blood-spattered adminstration since he seized control in 1952 invites only disgust. On the other hand, who knows anything about . . . young Fidel Castro? A courageous young man? Yes. An oddball? Yes, one who openly insults other nations by kidnapping foreigners to dramatize his cause. A Communist? Maybe . . . but probably not, although he is the darling of the Moscow Press . . . Meanwhile a brief pause here up north in terms of . . . endorsement will do Uncle Sam no harm, while Cuba figures out whether or not it has skidded out of the political frying pan and into the fire.192
A 9 January T-U opinion piece, after the Eisenhower administration officially
recognized the Revolutionary Government, similarly concluded: “Recognition is apparently the
formal handshake. The embraces will come when recognizable democratic government is
established in Cuba.”193 On 15 January in the T-U, a front-page column by AP News Analyst
James Marlow queried: “The announced purpose of Fidel Castro’s revolution, which threw out
the dictatorship of Fulgencio Batista, was to restore democracy to Cuba. The question now is,
will it?”194 Based on how the two Rochester newspaper editorial staffs covered the war criminal
executions, the second major early 1959 narrative, the answer was an emphatic no.
According to the Zeitlin/Scheer study, between January and June 1959, thirteen to thirty-
nine percent of 418-858 total column inches of their examined coverage focused on trials and
summary executions by Castro’s forces.195 Based on my own brief quantitative analysis, January
and February featured numerous related articles, as my Rochester examples showed. Of the
sixty-three total Cuban-related pieces printed in the T-U in January, thirty-two of them were
192 “Good for Cuba! (We Hope),” D & C, 3 January 1959. 193 “U.S. Gives Cuba Handshake, Embrace May Come Later,” T-U, 9 January 1959. 194
James Marlow, “Castro’s Democracy Remains to be Proven,” T-U, 15 January 1959. 195 Zeitlin, Cuba, Tragedy in Our Hemisphere, 289.
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primarily focused on the ongoing executions.196 The few editorials on the same topic both in the
T-U and in the D & C, negatively portrayed Castro’s actions in this regard. Many of them
claimed all the American public needed to support the executions were for the accused
batistianos to be given “trials by due process,”197 not by “mob justice.”198 On 16 January, the D
& C ran the headline: “‘200,000 Gringos to Die’ if U.S. Interferes with Killings, Castro
Declares.”199 In response, the D & C’s editorial page on 22 January took condemnation of the
executions one step further. Under the headline: “Two Views on Fidel Castro,” were printed two
op-ed columns. David Lawrence, staff writer for the New York Herald-Tribune wrote:
Two wrongs do not make a single right. This moral principle seems to have been abandoned not only in Cuba, but by some people inside this country who condone the savagery which has prompted the executions of dozens of persons without trial . . . Can any government which does not give a fair trial to a person accused of crime be regarded as civilized? . . . Yet above all Castro could think of the other day was that the United States might intervene militarily. So he promptly threatened to massacre Americans.200
AP writer J.M. Roberts stated: “When Castro reacted against congressional critics . . . he
was reacting against those who fought for his country 50 years ago and then declined to take it
over as any other world power would have done . . . The United States won Castro’s war for him
when it finally cut off those (Batista’s) arms.”201 Overhead, the D & C ran this cartoon (see next
page):202
196 T-U archives, 1-31 January 1959. 197 “Castro Losing American Sympathy,” T-U, 16 January 1959. There was a single editorial which chose not to immediately condemn the executions, an 18 January D & C Letter to the Editor, written by Ellen W. Perkins. 198 David Lawrence, “Moral Principles Abandoned,” D & C, 22 January 1959. 199 AP, “‘200,000 Gringos to Die’ if U.S. Interferes with Killings, Castro Declares,” D & C, 16 January1959. 200 David Lawrence, “Moral Principles Abandoned,” D & C, 22 January 1959. 201 J.M. Roberts, “‘Cuban Rebels Urged Revenge’,” D & C, 22 January 1959. 202 “Starting Off in the Red,” D & C Editorial Page, 22 January 1959.
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This seemed to be a quite loud damnation of Castro’s exectutions, with little
understanding of any favorable position. Both articles, despite being labelled “Two Views on
Fidel Castro,” shared essentially the same viewpoint, one which any American-Cuban baseball
bond would have had a hard time overcoming.
In the D & C’s sports pages, Beahon covered the fate of the Sugar Kings semi-
extensively, culminating in a full page 31 January article entitled: “League Okays ’59 Baseball in
Havana.” In his piece, Beahon referred to a report Maduro gave to the IL Board of Governors
while presenting to Rochester an optimistic outlook on the IL’s future in Cuba. The D & C
Baseball Writer expressed:
Significant developments were: 1.The revolutionary government headed by Fidel Castro has assured Maduro the fullest cooperation, even to the extent of helping to sell season tickets. 2. Castro will throw out the first baseball of Cuba’s IL season before an expected throng of 25,000 in Gran Stadium April 14 . . . It is quite possible the victorious rebel leader will flu to Toronto to repeat the courtesy for that club’s home opener April 29. 3. Dr. Manuel Urrutia, new president of Cuba, has repeatedly and publicly promised help for all sports in Cuba. 4. As evidence of Maduro’s standing with the new government, Army Capt. Felipe Guerra, the new director of sports, offered Maduro a non-salaried job as coordinator of all amateur sports in Cuba. 5. The same Guerra’s first official act was to check out rumors that the Sugar Kings might not be playing at home . . . 6. Castro’s government will attempt to destroy the “numbers racket” . . . that conspires to keep Cuba’s lower income population financially broke, and this should help promote baseball attendance. 7. The civic resistance to the overthrown dictatorship, a two-year long “stay home” strike is naturally a thing of the past and the fans will return to the ballpark in greater numbers than ever before. 203
203 George Beahon, “League Okays ’59 Baseball in Havana,” D & C, 31 January 1959.
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There are three important revelations regarding this article. First, unlike his front-page
counterparts, Beahon tried to focus on a positive side of the Cuban Revolution, if solely in a
sporting context. Again, his background in baseball may have enabled him to see between the
lines on this issue. Second, it is solely through the baseball window that either Rochester paper
received any in-depth in-house writing on the Cuban Revolution. Most importantly however, is
that once again, this was buried in the sports section, far from the front page, and many a D & C
reader.
As the previous paragraphs clearly show, the American-Cuban baseball relationship was
being ignored by the Rochester front pages. No article or editorial in either daily outside of the
sports section mentioned the Sugar Kings in the first three months of 1959.204 With executions
and suppression of liberties going on, baseball was apparently irrelevant in terms of important
news from Cuba. This trend of apathetically disregarding the cultural bond of baseball’s
potential in terms of international diplomacy continued during the following three months.
From the beginning of April to the end of June, coverage of Cuba in the Rochester
newspapers remained level in terms of quantity. In total number of columns, the D & C ran
twenty-four in April, eleven in May, and seventeen in June. During those same months, the T-U
printed sixteen, twelve, and eleven articles, respectively.205 The Revolution remained an
important issue, but not enough to dominate either daily’s headlines.
Thematically, the Rochester press narrative also remained static. Executions were no
longer the focus, shifting towards Castro’s plans for agrarian reform and his views regarding
Cuba’s relationship with the United States. Most of the articles seemed to present a sympathetic,
204 T-U and D & C archives, 1 January-31 March 1959. 205 T-U and D & C archives, 1 April-30 June 1959.
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if wary, view of his regime.206 Paul Miller, the T-U’s editor, who served on the Gannett Board of
Directors, published an 18 April column in which he recounted the speech Castro gave in
Washington D.C. the day before. Miller remarked:
It was an appealing performance . . . He (Castro) is brave and . . . intelligent. He is also inexperienced and beset by towering problems. Most of those who heard him . . .found themselves generally sympathetic but they will wait and see . . . Time will tell whether an earnest young fighter for freedom can now keep the Commies and their assorted fronts from becoming the scavengers of his victory.207
With the exectuions in the not-so-distant past, Miller’s review showed a Rochester press
focused primarily on the future of Cuba under Castro, one which he felt Americans should be
optimisitic, yet wary about.
This trend continued through June, most notably expressed by T-U staff writer Bill
Ringle, who went to Havana for a story. On 9 June, the T-U’s front page ran the headline:
“Under Castro, Cuba is Gripped in Almost Evangelical Fervor,” and then in smaller print: “But
There’s Some Distrust of his Aims, Methods.” Within the article this distrust mainly revolved
around the issue of land reform. Regarding other Cuban issues however, Ringle noted: “In
talking to both . . . supporters of Castro and those who despise him, you find they agree: That
Castro has made Cuban government honest . . . That Batista was despicable . . . (share)
puzzlement and resentment over American objections to executions of Batista followers . . . The
Cubans I talked to thought killing was too good for them.”208
Ringle’s article is notable for another reason, one arguably more important in regard to
this study. His trip to Havana was made possible due to the Havana Sugar Kings, a relationship
not disclosed in the article. Earlier in the week, another Ringle front-page article appeared, about
206 Ibid. 207
Paul Miller, “Castro Faces the Editors; His Plea: ‘Come to Cuba’,” T-U, 18 April 1959. 208 Bill Ringle, “Under Castro, Cuba is Gripped in Almost Evangelical Fervor,” T-U, 9 June 1959.
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Floridians running guns to anti-Castro forces.209 This article coincided with an away-from-home
series the Red Wings were playing against the Miami Marlins.210 The aforementioned Havana
column also took place following the conclusion of the Wings-Kings series in the Cuban capital.
The sole mention of baseball came on 8 June, when, above the Rochester Times-Union logo,
appeared: “In Cuba, They’re Fanaticos. Meet Them on Page 40.”211 In the article, Cuban passion
for the game is clearly defined and placed on display for the T-U readers, as Ringle wrote:
Take a fanatico, then give him some chicharrones, a bottle of beer, an occasional jonron, some tubeys, and well-timed ponchados. The result: one happy Cuban . . . Apart from the “Barbados,” Castro’s bearded followers . . . the first differences the Rochester fan notices are the ticket hawkers standing outside the big cast-concrete stadium . . . Once the game begins, he (the fanatico) becomes more effervescent than Wings fans usually do. Every pitch is an event, a hit a signal for cheering, a triple or home run an excuse for pandemonium . . . U.S. ball players experienced in Latin America think Cuban fans have more savvy than Americans. “They really know the game,” says Wings manager Cot Deal, who has played in Latin American winter leagues . . . Havana baseball officials don’t agree. “Sure, they’re more passionate than U.S. fans,” says one. “That’s our Latin temperament. But they also think they know more baseball. Every guy is a manager. They don’t come to see the game they only come to see the home team win. They don’t really like baseball. They come here to criticize more than to enjoy the ball game” . . . Havana absorbs a lot more baseball than Rochester in a year. In the winter a four team Cuban League operates in La Gran, Some of the Wings played in it . . . The Cuban baseball vocabulary is borrowed from the American. Most terms have no roots in Spanish, but approximate the American sound . . . The average attendance per game is 3,000 in a summer season . . . Cuban fans like to catch pop flies, clap in unison for no reason at all and, more than Americans, boo the umps. They booed yesterday when they felt the Wings were stalling in the second game on which a time limit had been agreed. Missing yesterday was one of the hallmarks of Sugar Kings baseball – the fans’ rhumba band which used to play constantly while the Cuban club was at bat. But with no rhumba band to listen to, some fans contented themselves with listening to play by play accounts, over small radios, of the game they were watching.212
Since Ringle was not a sportswriter, there are several key notes to mention about his
article. First, unlike Beahon, he resorted to using stereotypical language to describe the Sugar
Kings’ fanbase, something the former had stopped using years before. In fact, Ringle went one
step further by throwing Spanish words in the first sentence, without bothering to translate for his
209 Bill Ringle, “Smuggler of Arms are Brazen,” T-U, 5 June 1959. 210 Bill Ringle, “Wings Defeat Miami,” T-U, 5 June 1959. 211 “In Cuba, They’re Fanaticos. Meet them on Page 40.” T-U, 8 June 1959. 212
Bill Ringle, “Baseball . . . Cuban Style,” T-U, 8 June 1959.
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English speaking readership. This showed how ineffective limiting the baseball lens to the sports
section had prepared the average Rochesterian to utilize it in understanding their Cuban
counterpart. Second, it also described the atmosphere at a La Gran contest, something which
could have gone a long way towards entrenching a Rochester-Havana cultural connection if it
had received front-page coverage.
Most importantly, in order to read this article, to find out it was about baseball, and even
to learn that Ringle had written it, one had to turn to the opening page of the sports section and
locate it right next to the box score.213 The T-U’s editorial staff essentially exploited the Red
Wings as a way to get a local perspective on the Cuban situation, without actually mentioning
such means. With baseball arguably being the best way to establish a cultural bond of friendship
between America and Cuba, the IL connection was ignored by Rochester’s front pages. This
trend briefly subsided during the rest of June but emerges reinforced at the end of the following
month.
Quantitatively, July 1959 saw a drastic increase in Cuban-focused stories in both the D
& C and the T-U, running thirty-five and thirty-three front-section articles, respectively.214 On 2
July, an editorial article ran in the D & C which prophesized:
A land-distribution law . . . certain to plunge Cuba into a long depression unless drastically altered . . . At the same time political purges are being carried out in Havana’s schools . . . Reports have been coming out of the island for months about allegedly growing Communist strength . . . A man who means so well is doing so badly that his efforts will result in the opposite of what he wants for his people.215
Not only was the coverage increasing, but as the previous quotation revealed, it was
primarily negative towards the current regime.
213
Ibid. There was no game report ie play by play, simply an attached box score. 214 T-U and D & C archives, 1-31 July 1959. 215 “Cuban Tragedy,” D & C, 2 July 1959. There was a cartoon over it showing a machete wielding Castro making a jungle trail, and the forest was labelled “Post-Revolution Problems.”
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On 16 July, a T-U editorial criticized Castro for anti-American rhetoric when the former
commander of the Cuban Revolutionary Air Force, Pedro Luis Díaz Lanz, testified before a U.S.
Senate Subcommittee that Cuba’s government had fallen to heavy communist infiltration. The
article argued, “As hard as it may be for some Cubans to understand, a Senate Subcommittee
does not speak for the United States.”216
Two days after Cuban President Manuel Urruitia’s forced resignation, in what Senzel
described as a “personal finger-wagging warning to Castro,”217 a 21 July D & C editorial further
lamented: “Castro has spent most of his time in office castigating this country. Talk about biting
the hand that feeds you! He’s been trying to take ours off at the elbow . . . Castro must
understand the unwritten rule: Don’t kick your best customer.”218
During July, Cuban baseball was nowhere to be seen in the front page or editorial
discussions, even during the Wings-Kings series.219 In the early morning of 26 July, the Verdi
shooting incident briefly changed that. The coverage of it also clearly showed that Cuban
baseball did not bring the Revolution to Rochester’s front pages, but the other way around.
First we need to focus on George Beahon’s front section coverage of the event, as his is
the most notable. The D & C’s 26 July morning edition ran with the headline: “Marines Storm
Ontario Beach in Windup of Lake Operations.” And, as Senzel described: “At the top of the
page, in the right-hand corner and obviously a bit late in arriving: BULLET HITS VERDI IN
CUBAN BALLGAME.”220 The entire article read:
Frank Verdi, coaching at third base for the Rochester Red Wings, was grazed by a “July 26 Celebration” stray bullet early today. The Wings immediately walked off the field with the score tied 4-4 after eleven innings. Havana shortstop Leo Cardenas was also hit by another stray
216 “Diaz’ Charges Not Made by the United States,” T-U, 16 July 1959. 217
Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 72. 218 “Castro Cracking,” D & C, 20 July 1959. 219 T-U and D & C archives, 23-25 July 1959. 220 Senzel, Baseball and the Cold War, 80. Senzel fails to mention that Beahon wrote it.
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bullet. Neither player was injured seriously, the bullet not breaking the skin. An outbreak of stray firing in Gran Stadium began shortly after midnight, the beginning of the anniversary of the July 26 Movement. Many troops were in the stands, some carrying tommy guns and side arms. Other details, see page 1C.221
Ironically, on page 14A that same morning, a Beahon piece written prior to the same
game was featured. Entitled: “Cubanistas, Machetes at Sides, Gather to Cheer Rebel
Anniversary,” the article described:
Free Cuba on the eve of its first big celebration is a city of many contradictions. In the streets below my hotel window, the impromptu parades have started, nearly 24 hours in advance. The bars are closing at 6 p.m. because Fidel Castro . . . does not want his little people to get in trouble tonight before they pay homage tomorrow. In the lobby, an American whispers: “This man is a wild idealist. He can’t guarantee seven million tons of sugar, which is the make-or-break industry. But he is taking farms from the landowners and splitting them out to the peasants. Not to grow sugar. He is economically unsound.” On the streets the Cubanistas walk, machetes swinging at their side. They are incredibly polite and well behaved . . . the monied Cubans talk disparagingly of Fidel, “He is promoting a circus tomorrow . . . The whole thing is corny.” In a shopping center, a Cuban storekeeper was angry. “Why must you suspect everything bad . . . Your government helped Batista when he was torturing and murdering our students. Now Castro is trying to put the pieces together and give Cuba real democracy, but you Americans pick, pick, and pick. Why?” . . . He is an incredible hero here . . . Said a hotel man hopefully, “They are certainly entitled to their demonstrations and celebrations but when does he get down to business in the cabinet meetings instead of at mass meetings and on television shows?”222
Once again, Beahon was trying to portray both sides of the Castro debate, this time with
nary a mention of baseball. This led further credence to the theory that baseball had helped, at
least within Beahon, establish a bond with his Cuban interviewees. This also marked a turning
point as the usage of baseball within his front-page coverage of the island would drastically
decrease after the Verdi incident, further revealing how separate the Rochester press wanted to
portray the two storylines: baseball and the spectacle of Cuba.
The following morning the D & C’s main headline proclaimed: “Millions in Havana
Cheer as Castro Warns Critics, Accepts Post as Premier.” The attached AP column, described in
221
George Beahon, “Bullet Hits Verdi in Cuban Ballgame,” D & C, 26 July 1959. 222 George Beahon, “Cubanistas, Machetes at Sides, Gather to Cheer Rebel Anniversary,” D & C, 26 July 1959.
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lengthy detail the anniversary celebrations, minus any mention of baseball.223 However, next to
the article was a picture of Frank Verdi poking his finger through the bullet hole in his ballcap,
while surrounded by other Wings. Underneath the photo was a Beahon article entitled:
“Nightmare in Havana – Wings in Real Danger, other stories, picture, Page 31.” Behaon related:
Were they real bullets flying around in Gran Stadium Saturday night? They were. Were they aimed at the two players who were struck by the nearly spent missiles? Unquestionably not. Was the danger that prompted the Red Wings to refuse to finish the series today and pull out of Cuba several hours ahead of schedule, real or imagined, or exaggerated? The answer to that question is not easy . . . One thing cannot be argued: When highly emotional Cubans-armed young soldiers wearing pistols, rifles, and sub-machine guns-begin blasting into the air and into the ground in a wild, uncontrolled celebration, there is danger . . . It was impossible to determine whether the bullets that struck Verdi and Cardenas came from inside or outside the stadium.
After describing the Verdi incident in detail Beahon continued: There will be varied versions of this Latin-American baseball “shoot-em-up.” To this
reporter, from a press box vantage point, it looked this way: Promptly at midnight, rockets behind the stadium signalled the start of . . . celebrations. The Cuban anthem was played, and everyone rose to sing. At the same time, weapons inside and outside the ballpark began firing, to desist only while the anthem was finished. The umpires had a conference, debating whether to call the game right there, with Rochester leading 4-3 after 10 ½ innings. The arbiters decided not to risk the wrath of perhaps 5,000 fans whose team . . . was losing. Shooting was sporadic for several minutes and play halted several times while barbudos fired their weapons from various sections of the spacious stadium. One soldier, sitting next to Red Wing General Manager George Sisler Jr., in a front row box seat, emptied a .45 automatic into the turf near the dugout . . . (Then after Verdi was hit,)224 The general effect was terrifying to many. One veteran Cuban writer . . . hit the deck when the firing started. Many players from both teams, and the umpires, were visibly shaken even an hour after they left the field. Immediately after the game, Deal said he would not ask his players to take the field today for a double-header . . . Guzzetta the International League’s umpire in chief, told this writer he would, “not umpire . . . on Sunday even if it costs me my job.”
Finally, after describing the failed “negotiations” between Red Wings and Cuban officials
to resume play of the doubleheader, Beahon concluded:
The entire incident last night is due to the simple fact that many of the Cuban soldiers are untrained in handling of weapons. Almost daily, in barracks and on streets, Cubans are wounded or killed in gunfire accidents. In the dugout and the stands and in the press box, you rub elbows and shoulders with weapons at all time. Even during the games . . . soldiers are on the field. This
223
AP, “Millions in Havana Cheer as Castro Warns Critics, Accepts Post as Premier,”D & C, 27 July 1959. 224 Parenthesis mine.
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lack of training, plus emotion, caused last night’s near-tragic incident. Today it might have been perfectly safe to play, but as general manager . . . Sisler felt he had no right to subject his players to possible danger. As this is written in my Nacional Hotel Room . . . thousands of Cubans line the Malecon, waiting for the mass celebration and Fidel Castro’s speech.225
As the most thoroughly detailed account of 25-26 July 1959 in Gran Stadium, this article
magnified several key elements of American-Cuban baseball relations, at least through the lens
of Gannett publications. First, compared to many other Revolutionary incidents, the coverage on
the Verdi shooting was calm, detailied, and put a familiar face upon Cubans for Rochester
readers to identify with. In this manner, baseball was still in the mind of George Beahon, a
bonding agent between American and Cuban fans. It should not be thrown away lightly.
However, due to Beahon being the sole Rochester voice on the incident, the impact of the
bonding agent is lost on his audience. Second, it marked one of the few instances where the
event on the field was considered more important than the Revolution. Most of the baseball
stories covered in this study talked about how the sport impacted the Revolution. This one
focused upon how the Revolutionary fervor interrupted the ‘will o’the wisp’ of baseball. Finally,
outside of the editorial page and the sports section, the Verdi incident was not mentioned on the
D & C’s front pages again for the remainder of 1959, showing how little appeal baseball had as a
Revolutionary lens by the Rochester press.226
In contrast, outside of the editorial and sports sections, the Verdi incident featured only
on the T-U’s front page. Since the T-U did not print a Sunday edition, their editors had to wait till
Monday, after the Wings had already arrived back in Rochester, to comment on the story. On 27
June, this photograph ran on the front page (see next page):
225 George Beahon, “Nightmare in Havana – Wings in Real Danger,” D & C, 27 July 1959. 226
D & C archives, 28 July-31 October 1959.
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Attached to the picture was an article written by sportswriter Dave Occor, who had
interviewed Verdi at the Rochester airport. Afterwards, Occor’s journalistic energies shifted
focus toward opinions regarding the Havana situation from around the IL. He quoted Montreal
manager Clay Bryant, Miami manager John (Pepper) Martin, Richmond manager Steve Souchak,
and Columbus GM Harold M. Cooper expressing refusal to travel to Havana. Toronto
representatives, while unable to be interviewed, were said by Occor to “reportedly have signed a
petition saying they would not play in Havana anymore this season.” He also summarized IL
commissioner Frank J. Shaughnessy’s remarks that stated: “the incident was a ‘fourth of July’
type celebration” and said there is no reason why Toronto and Montreal (the next two Havana
home opponents,) should not go to Havana.” Then Occor interviewed Sisler Jr., who made no
mention about potentially having to return to Cuba. The article concluded:
Manager Cot Deal says he wouldn’t balk at going to Havana again. ‘This was a one-shot thing’ . . . The Wings had in their possession Verdi’s hat. Near the peak on the hat band was a hole the circumference of a man’s little finger. A plastic liner under the hat saved Frank from serious injury. Pitcher Cal Browning summed up the feelings of the deplaning Wings with a grin and, ‘I was one of those who missed the purple heart.’”227
227 Dave Ocorr, “‘I Wouldn’t Go Back to Havana’ Says Verdi’,” T-U, 27 July 1959. This was their afternoon edition. Their evening edition had a slightly different article on the front page, also by Ocorr, entitled, “IL President
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In contrast to his morning counterpart, Occor did not attempt to portray the incident
through the lens of the Cuban Revolution, ie why it had happened in the first place. Instead, he
shaped it as simply being a baseball story. Admittedly, as the several IL officials he interviewed
attested, this was by no means a normal baseball occurrence, but Occor failed to explore it
beyond that point. Whereas the D & C would remove Beahon’s baseball narrative viewing of
Cuba from the front pages the following year, the T-U had already abandoned what was left of
their coverage.
Just like their morning counterpart, the T-U failed to mention the Verdi incident for the
rest of 1959, outside of the editorial and sports sections. From 28 July to 3 August, a total of four
editorials relevant to the 26 July episode were published between both Rochester dailies. On 28
July, one such T-U piece reasonably proposed:
The incident Saturday night was not anti-American or anti-Red Wing. The casualties were equally divided. It was just one of those things that happens in a place where a large number . . . carry guns and are in the habit of firing them off to show their exuberance. This is not the atmosphere for baseball . . . Red Wing Manager Cot Deal, who was there, does not consider the incident an example of what normally could be expected in Havana . . . But since July 26 now has been proclaimed a day for similar celebrations in Havana, it’s something for the schedule makers to take into account. Better schedule the . . . Sugar Kings in some other International League city on that day.228
In response to Shaughnessy’s statement that “there is no reason why Toronto and
Montreal should not go to Havana,” a 30 July D & C Letter to the Editor waxed pessimistically
that: “At this time may I suggest that if ‘Fearless Frank’ really believes this line, and thinks the
players would be on the ‘chicken’ side if they don’t go he, and any other League officer who
Discounts Cuba Shooting.” The primary difference was that this article removed all of the Red Wing quotes, and solely focused on the words of Frank J. Shaughnessy. 228
“Havana No Place for Baseball on July 26,” T-U, 28 July 1959.
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feels the same way, should volunteer their services for all the remaining Cuban home games as
foul line umpires.”229
On 2 August, a D & C editorial entitled “Lethal League” proposed:
There is a report that some Red Wing ball players are reluctant to play . . . in Havana, on grounds that gunfire is not a normal occupational hazard of baseball. Inasmuch as these seem to be days of changing . . . affiliations and formation of new leagues, we suggest a league composed of the following areas ( for a starter) which have a good deal in common: Cuba, Viet Nam, Tibet, Iraq, Matsu, and Jordan. Any player surviving a swing around this circuit would be eligible for a bonus, retirement, and the hall of fame.230
Finally, a 3 August D & C Letter to the Editor featured Marianne Dean of 507 Grand Ave
complaining:
Is Rochester that much off the map, that “Maverick” . . . cannot be skipped for one night to make room for the Vice President . . . in a very important debate? I would also like to mention that the shot fired at one of our baseball players in Havana was mentioned 50 times in the news broadcasts. Could 25 times possibly be considered enough and could the time for the other 25 minutes be used for the Vice President . . . This . . . is not the first time that we have been deprived of internationally important events when they coincided with the drivel on our local stations.231
These were four different quotations with different viewings of the Verdi incident, and
yet they all lead credence to the same argument. The 28 June T-U article showed Beahon-esque
understanding of what happened, simply proposing that games on 26 July not be played in
Havana anymore. The two corresponding D & C editorials each argued, through levels of
sarcasm, that IL baseball should not be played in Havana regardless of the date. Both compared
sending another IL team to Cuba as parallel to sending soldiers to a dangerous warzone. Mrs.
Dean’s Letter to the Editor showed incredulence that something baseball related was taking away
from “real news” involving the then-Vice President. In fact, she condenmned the “drivel from
229 Robert Butterfield,” Let Fearless Frank Make Havana Trip,” D & C, 30 July 1959. 230 “Lethal League,” D & C, 2 August 1959. 231 Marianne Dean, “Red Wing Casualty Overshadows Nixon,” D & C, 3 August 1959. Maverick refers to the TV Western starring James Garner and Jack Kelly.
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our local stations,” from depriving Rochester listeners of “internationally important events.”
Despite being seemingly different there was three key similarities between them.
First, they all showed indifference if not outright hostility to the concept of any
American-Cuban bond, let alone through baseball. Second, they viewed baseball as something
separate from “international important events.” The D & C editorials felt that Cuba was too
hostile to send in simple ballplayers. Mrs. Dean felt the story itself was not even worth covering.
Finally, they marked the last time until the following year that this narrative was covered in
either dailies’ front sections.
On a side note, from 4 August to August 7, the Sugar Kings came to Rochester for a
three-game series. It was briefly discussed on the front page of the 4 August T-U edition, which
proclaimed: “‘Beisbol,’ Sugar to Sweeten Fans.” This photograph of a Red Wings tickethandler
surrounded by bags of sugar and travel brochures was attached to the accompanying article:232
In both dailies’ sport sections, the first game of the Wings-Kings series was advertised in
a comical fashion (see next page):233
232 Al C. Weber, “‘Beisbol,’ Sugar to Sweeten Fans,” T-U, 4 August 1959. 233 “Night Baseball,” D & C Sports Section, 4 August 1959.
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That is how the Verdi crisis ended on the front pages of Gannett’s Flower City dailies, as
a comical unimportant footnote. It also appears to show that the newspaper editors viewed
supposed American-Cuban cultural baseball bonds as mere jokes.
The last three months of the 1959 baseball season featured a dramatic decline in the
number of Cuban-related stories in both Rochester dailies. While in August the D & C and the T-
U printed twenty-five and twenty-one relevant front section articles, respectively, in September
and October the two newspapers only published eight, combined.234 They spoke briefly about
the counterrevolutionary invasion crushed in part by American barbudo William Morgan,235 as
well as the nixed deal between the British government and the Cuban Air Force.236 For the most
part Rochester went back to a semi-silence regarding its southern island neighbor. To follow the
Sugar Kings miracle run to the Little World Series championship, or to even know they had
made the final, one would have had to read the sports sections.237 Not only was baseball failing
to serve as an American-Cuban cultural bond, but America’s pastime could not even make
Castro, by this point a huge “cause celebre,” appear in either Rochester newspaper. By the
following spring, the “Maximum Leader” was firmly entrenched within the D & C’s and T-U’s
234 T-U and D & C archives, 1 August-31 October 1959. 235 AP, “Castro Confer with Naval Aide amid More Rumors of Invasion,” D & C, 14 August 1959. 236 AP, “British Hedge on Report of Jets-For-Cuba Deal,” D & C, 17 October 1959. 237 AP, “Cuba Still Whoops Up Junior Series Victory,” D & C, 8 October 1959. The only non-AP story during the entire AAA playoffs was a Beahon In This Corner at the start of the Kings-Millers LWS championship series. In said article, the Rochester sportswriter mocked the likely stereotypical approach that Millers players would take regarding their Cuban opponents, and how big of a miscalculation that approach would turn out to be.
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opening sections. The American-Cuban baseball relationship prompted several articles to
appear, notably two lengthy front-page columns by Beahon. However, the utilization of the
relationship was barely acknowledged. And when it was acknowledged, it was solely to express
division between the two nations.
The Pot Runneth Over and the Benches Clear
1960
From the end of the Red Wings training camp in early April to early July’s forced Sugar
Kings relocation to Jersey City, both Rochester dailies published a stream of relevant front
section articles.238 In April, the D & C ran twenty-seven stories about Cuba, while their
afternoon competitors ran twenty-nine. In May, the morning daily published twenty-four and the
T-U published twenty. The month of June featured the D & C print twenty-nine and the T-U
print twenty-two. Finally, in July, the morning newspaper ran fifty-five and their afternoon
counterpart ran thirty-six.239 Quantitatively, this was the high water mark of Cuban-centered
stories featured in the two Rochester dailies. Thematically, both local newspapers portrayed
Fidel Castro in a singular and overbearing fashion, as an enemy of the American people, who
only spouted anti-U.S. diatribes.
On 5 April, the front page of the sports section announced: “Maduro Sees No Reason
Why IL Should Quit Cuba.” Beahon, after conducting an interview with the Sugar Kings owner,
announced:
Bobby Maduro . . . is a proud man. He is hurt by all the talk about whether the International League should evacuate his native Havana. He was bitterly disappointed when the
238 T-U and D & C archives, 1 April-31 July 1960. 239 Ibid.
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Baltimore Orioles reneged on exhibition dates in Cuba last week, thereby spotlighting the scheduled April 20 IL inaugural on the Island. The Red Wings, controversial figures in the 26th of July . . . incident last year, are scheduled “to go in the first wave,” as one baseball man facetiously put it. This is Bobby Maduro’s side of the story as he told it to the Democrat and Chronicle here before he flew back to Havana to prepare, he hopes, for a full season of baseball. “I feel like the child of a divorced couple . . . I love Cuba and I love the United States. Which way can I turn this thing? . . . I do not feel that politics and baseball should mix . . . Everyone . . . seems to adopt the attitude of wondering who will be responsible if something should happen. I’ve got five U.S. players on my club right now. They are neither complaining nor asking anyone to take responsibility . . . Tell me about responsibility. I get my hair cut in the barbershop of the Park Sheraton Hotel when I am in New York City. This is where Albert Anastasia was killed. Who’s responsible for me in New York City? Last week, the Richmond Virginians had some shoes and gloves and a wrist watch stolen from their clubhouse in a Florida training camp. If this had happened in Havana, it would have been an international news item. A terrible thing . . . What I really don’t understand is why all this excitement about sending teams to fill league commitments in Cuba, only 95 miles from your country, when you are sending teams to compete in nearly all sports in Russia. Russia is alright, but Cuba is not. Is that the picture?”240
Again, this showed Beahon’s movement against the grain as he attempted to portray the
other side of the relocation coin ie giving Maduro a chance to address those criticizing him, both
in Rochester and elsewhere in the IL. He did not agree with or refute the Cuban’s points, but laid
them out for his readership to absorb, albeit solely in the sporting pages. However, this
seemingly marked the end of Beahon’s concillatory nature as his articles both on the front page
and in the sports sections took an increasingly critical tone.
On 6 April, the headline on the morning newspaper’s fifth page blared: “Cuba Catholics
Rapped for Opposing Regime.”241 On 9 April, the front-page headline announced: “Castro
Betraying Ideals of Freedom, says Eisenhower.”242 An editorial that same day warned of a
potential “Guantanamo Grab.”243 The next morning, the editorial page had two anti-Castro
columns and a cartoon which implied that Cuba was a “bad apple,” which left unchecked would
240 George Beahon, “Maduro Sees No Reason Why IL Should Quit Cuba,” D & C, 5 April 1960. 241 AP, “Cuba Catholics Rapped for Opposing Regime,” D & C, 6 April 1960. 242 AP, “Castro Betraying Ideals of Freedom, says Eisenhower,” D & C, 9 April 1960. 243 “Guantanamo Grab,” D & C, 9 April 1960.
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spread Communism across Latin America.244 On 16 April, a William S. White editorial
declared: “Is it better to go on with the policy of do-nothing and lose Latin America’s and the
world’s respect? Or is it better- to take up our clear duties, and act . . . Surely the question
answers itself.”245 The next morning, the D & C baseball writer, George Beahon commented in
a front-page article entitled: “Cubans Building towards Inevitable Bloodshed.” Sent to the
Cuban capital to cover the Wings season opener against Havana, Beahon’s lengthy column
concluded:
The bloodiest internal struggle in Cuban history could result. Even before then, the United States might be pushed to the point where it is forced to break off diplomatic relations. Castro behaves exactly like a man with that goal foremost in his workings. When? Nobody will offer a guess. Five days to five months, say accredited newsmen who have spent decades covering such scenes. They agree on but one point: It is a pressure chamber that must blow. After that? Possibly a sober government, possibly an out and out Communist state. But certainly bloodshed.246
The only hint of baseball in the article was the notification which read: “Havana Sugar
Kings to be transferred to Jersey City within 30 days, forecasts Sports Writer Beahon, in a sports
special today on Page 1C.”247 On the 19 April front page appeared a quotation entitled: “Least
Popular, That’s Beahon.” Further, the article announced:
Beahon has been under fire by Cuban press as a result of recent events . . . an exclusive story saying baseball had less than 30 days to live in Havana. Said a U.S. wire service correspondent to Beahon via telephone from Havana today: “You are not quite the No. 1 public enemy of baseball in Cuba. The . . . spot is reserved for Lee MacPhail, the Baltimore general manager who called off the exhibition games. You are however running a close second.”248
These two articles showed that the D & C editorial staff, if not Beahon himself, were now
deliberately separating the baseball from the Revolution in their constructed narrative. In order to
244 “Hard to Do Much about It,” D & C Editorial page, 10 April 1960. The two articles were an op-ed entitled, “Latin America Now is Target of Pink Push,” by Lorna Morley and an unattributed editorial called “Dictator Defined.” 245 William S. White, “Either We Face Up to Castro or Lose World Respect,” D & C, 16 April 1960. 246
George Beahon, “‘Cubans Building towards Inevitable Bloodshed’,” D & C, 17 April 1960. 247 Ibid. 248 “Least Popular, That’s Beahon,” D & C, 19 April 1960.
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read the baseball story, one had to go to page 1C ie the sports section. Second, the latter article
fails to take into consideration the possibility Beahon’s falling out amongst Cubans had more to
do with his insinuation that Cuba was about to break out into civil war rather than his stance
about the Sugar King’s place in the IL.
On 20 April, underneath “Indians Overcome Amerks, 3-2,”249 a front-page article
proclaimed: “Wings Open in Havana Tonight.” After a two sentence quotation detailing
manager Clyde King’s plan to utilize power hitter Luke Easter against Havana’s pitching, the
article read: “George Beahon story on Page 28 (ie. the sports section.)”250 The following day’s
front-page saw a Beahon piece which announced: “Prime Minister . . . Castro and U.S.
Ambassador Phillip Bonsal attended the same party tonight, but they didn’t mix.” After further
chastising Castro for showing up minutes late, Beahon commented:
Someone in the press box wondered out loud why it had not been arranged for Bonsal to catch the Cuban leader’s first pitch, “After all,” reasoned this dubious wit, “Castro has been doing all the pitching and Bonsal all the catching up to now in Cuba.” Fan reception for the Red Wings in pre-game ceremonies was tremendous, offering added evidence that . . . troubles still are confined to government level. . . . Game Story, Page 45.251
This article also offered evidence of splitting the two narratives, baseball and political, as
far as possible from each other. It is also important to note that this was the last time Cuban
baseball appeared on the D & C’s front page until the end of June, while the T-U did not feature
the Wings-Kings series at all on its front page.252
During the month of May, both Rochester newspapers primarily focused upon the alleged
“muzzling” of Cuba’s press.253 Articles taken from the AP repeatedly talked of Castro’s regime
249 Hans Tanner, “Indians Overcome Amerks, 3-2,” D & C, 20 April 1960. 250 George Beahon, “Wings Open in Havana Tonight,” D & C, 20 April 1960. Parenthesis mine. 251 George Beahon, “Castro at Wings Game, So is U.S. Envoy But- -,” D & C, 21 April 1960. 252 T-U and D & C archives, 22 April-30 June 1960. 253
UPI, “Last Independent Paper under Castro’s Thumb,” D & C, 17 May 1960.
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“nationalizing” newspaper after newspaper, primarily Diario de La Marina254 and Prensa Libre.
In fact, on 17 May, Page Two of the T-U declared: “Castro Seizes Last Free Daily.”255 A 21
May T-U editorial proclaimed:
Prensa Libre, Havana’s last outspoken independent newspaper was taken over (with government approval) by employees who refused to print an editorial denouncing, “the sinister international plot led by Russia against our soil” . . . Still the United States adhered to its policy of patience, patience, and more patience, although the longer this continues the more costly it will be in human anguish and treasure to bring some order out of the chaos which seems drawing nearer in the Pearl of the Antilles.256
This differs from Zeitlen/ Scheer, who attempt to make the claim that the newspaper
workers did it without the government’s approval.257 Whatever the case, it was clear that the
Rochester press was fully buying into the “nationalizing angle,” and were not interested in
hearing opposing viewpoints. Baseball was nowhere to be found in either the attached AP
articles or the locally written editorial columns during May.258
Throughout June, both the T-U and the D & C ran several anti-Castro editorials. On 7
June259 and 11 June, each daily ran a separate op-ed column calling for Congress to slash
America’s sugar quota with Cuba.260 The D & C’s 12 June editorial page printed an article that
proclaimed:
A Cuba becoming a Soviet base, a cog in the vast Communist apparatus, is something the Western Hemisphere cannot afford. What can be done about it without reverting to old-style Yankee “imperialism” . . . That would wreck our relations with Latin America and possibly do far more damage than a Communist Cuba . . . Meanwhile, U.S. self –restraint is put under even more severe strain by the fanatic Castro. That self-restrain could break.261
254 AP, “Cuban Paper Seized,” T-U, 11 May 1960. 255 UPI, “Castro Seizes Last Free Daily,” T-U, 17 May 1960. This is the exact same article as the one from the D & C. 256 “. . . How Costly is Patience in Cuba?,” T-U, 21 May 1960. 257 Zeitlin, Cuba, Tragedy in Our Hemisphere, 164-174. 258 T-U and D & C archives, 1-31 May 1960. 259
Congressional Quarterly, “Will Congress Swat Castro, the Fly in Our Sugar Bowl,” D & C, 7 June 1960. 260 “ . . . Fly in Our Sugar Bowl,” T-U, 11 June 1960. This was a response to the previous editorial in the D & C even though that connection is not mentioned. 261
“Future of Cuba,” D & C, 12 June 1960.
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The article essentially argued which would be worse: destroying American relations with
all of Latin America by invading Cuba, or allowing communism to infilitrate the western
hemisphere via U.S. inaction? This framing device continued throughout the remainder of the
study period in both Rochester dailies.
During the latter part of June, both Rochester newspapers published article after article
about a potential break between the U.S. and Cuba in their long-established sugar trade. This
was the environment in which Beahon was sent to Cuba in the month’s final weekend. On 27
June, both dailies ran a front page AP quotation which declared: “Munitions Blast Rips Havana:
2 Die, 50 Hurt.”262 At the bottom of the article, the D & C announced: “Electrical power was cut
off to part of the city, and an International League doubleheader was delayed, (See story on Page
20.)”263 On Monday, 28 June, featuring a notification which read: “D & C sports writer George
Beahon developed this exclusive report on Cuba while covering the Red Wings-Sugar Kings
baseball games in Havana during the weekend,” an article was printed entitled: “U.S., Cuba Gap
Widens Daily: Reds Pour In.” Beahon lamented:
The breach between the U.S. and Cuban government widens every day. And the world’s foremost Communist organizers are pouring through the gap in droves. This is not hearsay nor speculation. It is the considered opinion of the State Department, as expressed to me in Havana yesterday by an Embassy spokesman . . . Havana, 235 miles from Miami . . . is a demoralized city that has not begun to fight against communism’s crash program here . . . Russian architects are in Havana, working on plans for a five million dollar embassy. This carries a note of permanency . . . “Their job is only to hate our guts,” said a U.S. newsman. “We are in a very critical, crucial stage,” says the source close to the Embassy. “Anyone who does not agree is either a liar or a damn fool . . . This is what we fight here in Cuba, the propaganda battleground, the key nation” . . . In the face of this (calls to cut the sugar quota,) while Cuba makes land grabs, Guevara shouts that we pay the sugar bonus, “to enslave the Cuban people” . . . Consensus gives Castro 40 per cent of the Cubans as active supporters. Estimates as to where the other 60 . . . stand are varied . . . In the Stadium Club, which is the Havana baseball plant, Castro was available on TV after the game Friday night. The receiving set is in the bar section of the club. There were three people in that section. Twenty-five or 30 others shunned the magic lantern, and instead sat in a separated section in which service was much slower. It was obvious why they
262 AP, “Munitions Blast Rips Havana; 2 Die, 50 Hurt,” D & C, 27 June 1960. 263 Ibid.
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chose the other section. Embassy people considered this significant . . . All agree on one prediction: An uprising with bloodshed, and lots of it, before the year is ended. Meanwhile, Americans rush out, Communists rush in. It is indeed a depressing situation. And the fate of all the Americas could depend on future events in Cuba.264
Once again, this article revealed two important facts about the state of the American-
Cuban baseball bond. First, the front page did not consider baseball important in the grand
scheme of international relations with the island nation, as Beahon only mentioned it once in the
piece. Second, Beahon was now firmly anti-Castro. Since Castro was to many Rochesterians the
public face of Cuba, this stance by Beahon hurt the bond. Beahon had been one of the sole
sources of positive stories from the island nation in the Rochester press, and this change in his
postion only meant more negative pieces about Cuba, not less.
The first two weeks of July featured four events: Three American oil refineries were
nationalized by Castro’s regime, President Eisenhower officially cut off sugar purchases from
Cuba, the Sugar Kings unknowingly played their last road series in Rochester representing
Havana, and the front pages of Gannett’s local dailies ignored the baseball connection.
On 1 July, the Sugar Kings began a four-game series against the Red Wings. They played
a doubleheader the first day, and then one game each of the following two days.265 Despite both
dailies featuring news about the seized oil refineries and the proposed sugar cuts on each day of
the series, the respective game reports failed to leave the sports section.266 Perhaps it was
because the Rochester press was no longer interested in, if it ever was, maintaining a cultural
connection with the Cuban people. On 4 July, the D & C printed an op-ed piece entitled: “Castro
Spending Plenty to Subvert Latins,” William S. White wrote (see next page):
264 George Beahon, “U.S., Cuba Gap Widens Daily; Reds Pour In,” D & C, 28 June 1960. 265 T-U and D & C archives, 25 June-15 July 1960. It was advertised in both dailies, calling on fans to spend the 4 July weekend at the ballpark. The only information the advertisement had about their Cuban opponents was a Vs. Havana notification under each home date. 266 Ibid.
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The infection in Cuba is reaching the point of intolerable danger to the free world in this hemisphere. This is not the judgement of mere hysterical professional “anti-Communists” who see Moscow agents everywhere. It is the coolly considered conviction of elevated and truly liberal leaders of South America with whom this correspondent has talked . . . have told our State Department plainly that . . . Castro has permitted Cuba to become nothing less than a bridgehead for Soviet communism within 100 miles of the United States . . . they have suggested to the State Department, politely, that the United States government has so far failed to explain the realities to the American people, of whom only a tiny minority has any notion whatever of the facts of life in Cuba . . . This small step, however, if and when it is actually taken-will be only the barest beginning toward the development of a policy adequate to quarantine the Castro virus . . . Professional ‘liberals” who in the beginning howled Castro up as a kind of secular saint, have ceased their syrup eulogies of this bearded, this sensitive, this poetic lyncher . . . It is no longer possible to look at this hemisphere as a low-priority foreign policy area. It is becoming absolutely necessary to look homeward as well as across the sea.267
This piece continued the trend of calling for Americans to turn their attention towards
Cuba in order to prevent communism from gaining a foothold in the Western Hemisphere, with
little attention given to the actual people living on the island. Interestingly, the article claimed
that the United States government was not portraying Cuba accurately to Americans, while
simultaneously inaccurately portraying Cuba to Americans on its own.
The following afternoon, an editorial in the T-U called for the establishment of a “New
Monroe Doctrine.” The attached article stated that America should not “become so morally
hogtied it can’t tell black from white . . . There is a wide variety of measures of increasing
severity available for use in fighting Castro’s embrace of communism . . . The time to start the
big squeeze is now.”268 On 6 July, a D & C Letter to the Editor argued: “No Cuban team should
represent an American sport while the hammer and sickle are at work. This has no reflection on
the players themselves, but as a part of the team these young men are being jeopardized morally
and physically as long as they represent a country of Communist leanings.”269 As it turned out,
267 William S. White, “Castro Spending Plenty to Subvert Latins,” D & C, 4 July 1960. 268
“A New Monroe Doctrine Can be Used to Fight Castro,” T-U, 5 July 1960. 269 Donald C. Whiting, “Cut Off Trade with Cuba,” D & C, 6 July 1960.
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the Havana Sugar Kings, at least under that name, only featured three more times on the front
pages of either Rochester daily.
On 7 July, in an article entitled “Baseball’s Ax Falls on Cuba,” Beahon announced:
The International League has played its last game on Cuban soil. The Havana franchise will be yanked from its roots through execution of an emergency measure-within a few days. The Cubans, currently playing in Columbus and due home a week from today, will finish out their 1960 season in a three-way split schedule, the Democrat and Chronicle learned exclusively last night. Havana will play some of its game in Cincinnati’s Crosley Field, a few in Jersey City, and others . . . in the parks of clubs that normally would be playing in strife-torn Cuba . . . Maduro for obvious reasons must resist the move by the league, but actually is powerless, barring a complete breakup of the club, which carries many Cubans on its roster. The IL directors gave Shaughnessy this emergency power . . . in a meeting last December in St. Petersburg. “We can’t hurt Madruo, that’s important,” said Shaughnessy. “But I guess the time has finally come . . . We’ve got to make a move . . . We just can’t send any more of our teams into Havana.” Shaughnessy’s statement eliminated any remaining vestige of doubt in the matter . . . At least five (league directors) of them are opposed to playing any more games in Cuba, simply because of the increasing tension between dictator Fidel Castro’s government and the U.S. . . . The Red Wings are scheduled to play in Havana next month.270
It is important to note that this article did not mention any specifics as to why Cuba was
strife-torn, simply that the situation was as such and that it necessitated a Sugar Kings relocation.
Even, when baseball was the primary focus of a Beahon front-section story, it was treated as a
footnote in regard to the overall Cuban situation.
To further follow Havana’s relocation in the D & C, a Rochester reader would have had
to have been exposed to the next week’s several sports section articles. Nothing appeared on the
morning daily’s front page.271 The T-U did not have any front-page columns on the announced
Kings Jersey emigration from Cuba, choosing only to have a single sentence printed above the
Rochester Times-Union logo which read: “International League Pulls out of Havana, Page 26.”272
Again, all of the published articles about the relocation would have had to have been read in the
270 George Beahon, “Baseball’s Ax Falls on Cuba,” D & C, 7 July 1960. Parenthesis mine. 271 T-U and D & C archives, 9-14 July 1960. 272 “International League Pulls Out of Havana, Page 26,” T-U, 8 July 1960.
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afternoon newspaper’s sporting pages. The next, and last front-section article on the Havana
Sugar Kings, came in the form of a 15 July AP quotation on the T-U’s opening page which
declared: “Baseball Manager Called ‘Traitor.’ The unnamed writer elaborated:
Nap Reyes, newly named manager of the former Havana team in the International Baseball League, is a ‘traitor and an enemy of his own country,’ the semi-official newspaper of Premier Fidel Castro’s Cuban government said today . . . The front page story in today’s Revolucion said Reyes defended his action by saying he was employed by the Cincinnati Reds . . . The story said he ‘behaved like a Yankee.” The story continued that Reyes now is working “for the U.S. State Department and the Yankee dollar and is a traitor to the cause of Cuban baseball which in this case is the same cause as the Cuban Revolution.’(Other details, Page 23.)”273
This article showed two key factors regarding the endstate of the Rochester-Havana
cultural bond via sport as portrayed by the Gannett Flower City press. First, although it was a
front page story, it was penned by an outside source, showing how unimportant the bond was
thought to be by T-U editors. Second, even in its own story baseball was portrayed as a footnote
to the larger Revolution.
The final coverage the Sugar Kings received in either the front pages or the sports
sections occurred two days later in an edition of Beahon’s semi-daily column, In This Corner.
The D & C baseball writer reflected:
Goodbye, Havana: I’ll miss the talks with the pit bosses in the casinos when the action was good, interesting men and real experts in a specialized field. I’ll miss the black bean and rice soup, sprinkled with fresh chopped onions. And the sunsets over the Malecon. But I’ll never miss the depressing poverty of the streets. I’ll miss the tremendous color of Gran Stadium when the crowds were there: the trumpets in the stands: the lighted candles when the team was losing: the shrill whistles that served as the Cuban raspberries. I’ll miss Johnny Diaz Lopez, the clubhouse boy who helped the trainers, Danny Whelan and Sir James Dudley. And the pool at the Nacional. But I’ll never miss the first stories of Batista brutalities incredible but later authenticated. I’ll miss the honest, dedicated faces of the young barbudos, the bearded, rifle-bearing farmers down from the hills, when they saw Havana for the first time after Batista went down. I’ll miss the little men in white who always dashed into your hotel room to shutter the blinds five seconds after you closed the door. And the fresh pineapple juice. But I’ll never miss the eviscerating midday heat, and the bad drinking water, and the bad stomachs. I’ll miss Willie, at the Siboney Store, and his “nice cold cokes,” and the bartering he couldn’t deal without. I’ll miss the Stadium
273
AP, “Baseball Manager Called ‘Traitor’,” T-U, 15 July 1960.
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Club, and some of the ugly and not-ugly Americans who used to visit there after the games. And the ever delightful trio at the Club 21. But I’ll never miss the 10-a-night bombings, (Molotov cocktails) that were executed in the streets like clockwork, before Castro. I’ll miss the wonderful courtesies of Bobby Maduro, and the visits to his beach front home. I’ll miss the chef at “21” who used to kid us about the Sugar Kings. And the always thrilling taxi trips: horns only, no brakes allowed. But I’ll never miss the tourists who complained loudly and in public places, that “These people don’t even speak English!” I’ll miss the impassiveness of the high-life European gambler who fought it until 7 a.m. and lost $32,000 at the Capri. I’ll miss the lottery salesmen, a vanishing breed: and the street scenes: and the fabulous color of Tropicana. And arroz con pollo at Monseigneur. But I’ll never miss the arrogance of Batista’s censors, or the increasingly bad manners of some of Castro’s officers. I’ll miss the curious way the bartenders set the bottles in front of the customers, never caring how much or how little you pour. I’ll miss the thrill and dignity of a visit to the residence of the U.S. ambassador, the dedicated career diplomat, Philip Bonsal. And the appreciation of the good Cuban fans for the artistic play and the extra effort on the diamond. But I’ll never miss all the sweet souls who were too quick to needle me about my spring prediction that baseball was finished in Cuba, and that Havana would wind up in Jersey City.
This article showed why Beahon represented the best chance for a baseball bond to
succeed between America and Cuba, if only in the mind of one Rochester-based sports writer.
He clearly was well-travelled throughout the Havana scene, both amongst his fellow tourists and
the locals. He appreciated many aspects of Cuban culture, and celebrated the unqiue attributes of
island baseball, both on the diamond and in the grandstands. He was seemingly well-informed
regarding Batista’s negative impact upon the country, referencing both the brutal war crimes
carried out in his name and the censorship Beahon experienced firsthand. However, the article
also showed why any baseball bond would not succeed in the Rochester press, primarily for two
reasons. First, as shown by the last sentence, Beahon regarded Cuban baseball, while deserving
of praise, as being limited in scope. He semed to think that with the departure of the Sugar
Kings, that the sport itself was also leaving the island. Second, similar articles, even those
written by Beahon were either limited to the sports section or had the baseball narratives
removed.274
274 George Beahon, “In This Corner,” D & C, 17 July 1960.
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The Havana Sugar Kings, now dubbed the Jersey City Jerseys/Reds, were permanently
absent for the rest of either daily’s 1960 editions as far as their front-sections were concerned.275
However, in many respects this is not that much different from their coverage from early 1954 to
mid-1960. While the Sugar Kings, and to a minute extent, the American-Cuban baseball cultural
bond received obligatory front-page article space, it had been largely considered a footnote of the
Revolution, and had little place outside the sports section.
My study’s quantitative and thematic analysis of Rochester newspaper coverage of Cuba
outside the sports section make two thing perfectly clear. First, whatever sympathy the Flower
City press had for the Revolution in early 1959 was long gone. All talk of Castro as being a
“man with the best of intentions,”276 had been replaced by editorial harangues calling him a
“dictator.”277 While the people of Cuba were not criticized in print form to the same extent as
the socialist Revolutionary Government, the island had been firmly painted in the minds of the
Rochester media as a Soviet satellite.278 As a result, any attempt at utilizing the American-
Cuban baseball cultural bond to increase positive dialogue between the two countries would have
been hindered by the extensive negative coverage featured on Gannett’s front pages during 1959
and 1960. To help solve this problem, either the D & C or the T-U would have had to include
the Red Wings-Sugar Kings dynamic frequently in their front sections. Neither did.
The word incidental aptly describes Gannett’s front-section coverage of American-Cuban
baseball relations, especially when it came through the window of the local IL franchise, the Red
Wings. While Buffalo players threatening to strike in 1958, the Verdi shooting incident in 1959,
and Beahon’s assuredness of the Sugar King’s New Jersey relocation in early 1960 all received
275
T-U and D & C archives, 18 July-31 October 1960. 276 Paul Miller, “Castro Faces the Editors; His Plea: ‘Come to Cuba’,” T-U, 18 April 1959. 277 “Dictator Defined,” D & C, 10 April 1960. 278
T-U and D & C archives, 1 January 1959-31 October 1960.
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decent column space outside the sports sections, each event was portrayed as a simple after-
effect of the Revolution instead of something to impact Cuban-American relations. The few
times that this bond was addressed, it was regarded as insignificant. Beahon was frequently
referred to, even when his articles failed to mention baseball, as either a “baseball writer” or a
“sports reporter,” never a respected journalist.
As such, regardless of how much coverage the American-Cuban baseball narrative may
have received in either or both of the D & C’s and T-U’s sports sections, the apathy it underwent
in their respective front pages arguably negated whatever impact the sports section may have
had, which is why, for this study, the sports sections were not examined in any meaningful way.
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Chapter 5
Diplomatic Footnote: A Conclusion
At the beginning of this study, I asked a simple question: Was the local newspaper
reporting sympathetic or critical of Cuba’s move towards Castro and eventual communism, and
how did their baseball coverage factor into this portrayal? Or to put it another way, how was the
Cuban Revolutionary period covered in the Rochester press, and how did their baseball writing
impact coverage? When I initially asked, it might have seemed strange to put the baseball aspect
at the query’s end, especially with over half the paper being sports-centered.
While baseball may be the shared national pastime of both the United States and Cuba,
my first three chapters established that any cultural bond between the two hemispheric neighbors
on the diamond was decidedly one-sided. Back in the first half of the twentieth century,
extending to today, many Americans view baseball as “their” game. In Chapter 2, I used Ken
Burns’ Baseball to show the huge impact the sport has had on American national identity and its
prospective use as a cultural bridge. However, that Yankee “will o’ the wisp,” at least during the
imperialist-colonialist period, was not used as leverage to remove dividing cultural prejudices,
but rather as an exterminator of concepts, movements, and even human beings which disagreed
with “American” values and interests. Baseball was meant to convert “heathens and savages”
into civilized members of advanced society, who would pay economic and social tribute to the
United States in exchange for their cultural salvation.
Seemingly, from the minds of Americans, baseball did not give another country the right
to come up with their own rules and laws outside of Washington D.C. approval. All it gave the
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“converted” nation, in this case Cuba, was the right to be promoted as having been “saved” by
American imperialism. Baseball simply helped Cuba into the U.S.’s sphere of economic and
social influence, where they would be forced to abide by their northern neighbor’s policies via
cultural assimilation. The average American gained little to no cultural understanding or
sympathy towards their Cuban allies, with the diamond sport simply serving as proof of U.S.
natural superiority. The U.S.-Cuba baseball relationship was always displayed either with or
against the notion that Organized Baseball was the superior brand. Even modern day historians
such as Bjarkman and Echevarría, who hugely disagree whether the CWL or the post-
revolutionary League Nacional was superior, unknowingly state their positions through the same
American lens.
As Chapter 3 showed, the Cubans were forced to change and adapt to American
regulations in order to be accepted into Organized Baseball, further diluting any potential
cultural bond. The CWL had to promise to punish Mexican League defectors and accept losses
of more and more homegrown talent to MLB, which in itself was not happy letting its employees
participate in winter play, largely due to the physical injury factor. Cuban blacks had to endure
racist housing and transportation policies, meager pay, and a sizable language barrier, just to play
at the Class D Level. Fans were forced to accept weaker and weaker CWL competition in order
for the American game to prosper. Their American counterparts had to make no such
concessions and therefore only witnessed minimal contact with Cuban culture via the sporting
arena. When the Revolution broke out, other than a geographic connection and a stereotypical
understanding of Cuba, there was no cultural bond to connect the two countries, even though
they shared the same national pastime. The Cuban relationship was viewed as a footnote by
Organized Baseball, and the Sugar Kings were no different.
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If the Havana Sugar Kings existed in the lead-up to the Spanish-American War, maybe
the cultural connection would have received more Rochester coverage, as a pre-Platt
Amendment baseball bridge would have better served U.S. interests. Spanish attempts to muzzle
baseball’s American influence by trying to remove the Kings from the IL, would have been met
negatively by the U.S. press, under the rallying cry of “Cuba Libre.” In that conflict, Americans
were supposed to be on the same side as the Cubans. However during the Cuban Revolution,
with U.S. newspapers unsure of whether to back Batista or Castro, inserting baseball into the
situation would have surely “confused” American readers. And as Castro’s Cuba slowly slipped
away from the U.S. sphere of influence, any attempt to humanize or make Americans more
understanding of those soon to become possible enemy combatants, would have been
discouraged. This, combined with newspaper prejudice towards the sports section, with events
such as baseball games not considered “actual news,” caused the potential bonding agent of the
Sugar Kings to be ignored. From 1954 to 1960, Rochester’s T-U and D & C coverage of Cuba
went from being unaware, to indifferent, to slightly optimistic, to finally being outright hostile
towards Fidel Castro and Cuba. The two dailies’ baseball coverage impacted this portrayal very
little, except for adding an additional lens through which to perceive American propaganda.
From 1954 through 1956 very few Cuban-centric articles, let alone those about Cuban
baseball made the Rochester front pages. If the American-Cuban cultural bond on the diamond
was as significant as some modern academics like to claim, Cuban stories in general would have
appeared much earlier on both the T-U’s and the D & C’s opening sections. In these early Sugar
King campaigns, both Gannett publications sent beat reporters to cover Red Wings trips to the
Cuban capital. Any reports they gave regarding political and social upheaval on the island nation
were relegated to each respective daily’s sport section. There was no attempt to dig any deeper
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into the Cuban cultural psyche. While other Latin American countries such as Guatemala and
Argentina received extensive coverage in Rochester’s newspapers without any history of
baseball, Cuba remained largely ignored in the Flower City’s press during these three years. In
1957 the “Pearl of the Antilles” received a drastically increased presence in both the T-U and D
& C, with baseball barely playing a role in such presence.
With revolutionary violence exploding across Cuba, including Havana, the island
appeared much more frequently in both Gannett publications. Outside the sports section
however, the cultural connection of baseball was virtually ignored. In fact, during the entirety of
1957, only one such article appeared in either daily’s opening section. George Beahon’s 11
August column did not use baseball as a bridge between two cultures. Instead, the story of his
encounter with Batista’s censorship at Gran Stadium was offered as proof that Cuba was starting
to spin out of control.
In 1958, the T-U and the D & C again increased their Cuban-related content, but with the
exception of April, baseball was never the focus outside the sports section. And when it was
focused upon, either in a D & C editorial which scoffed at the idea of the island sharing its
national pastime with the United States, or in Beahon’s foray into the local news section, it was
not to establish any cultural bond. When the T-U gave the Shaughnessy vs Stiglmeir feud brief
front page coverage in early April, it ignored the larger ramifications of taking IL baseball away
from the island. While by no means were any of these articles in support of Batista’s regime,
neither did they impact on the negative press Cuba received in Rochester. In fact, editorials that
came out during the failed strike in early April and the hostage crisis in late June roundly
condemned Castro forces, laying much of the blame for the death and destruction primarily at the
barbudo’s feet.
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Once Castro came to power in early 1959, both Rochester dailies maintained a constant
stream of pieces about Cuba published in their front and editorial sections. While they both
applauded the overthrow of Batista, both editorial staffs focused on criticizing the new Castro
government. The numerous post-revolution war crime tribunals and summary executions
especially prompted negative editorial after negative editorial. Any talk about potentially
moving the Havana franchise off the island was directly contained within the T-U and D & C’s
sports section, with only Beahon providing consistent coverage on it. Shaughnessy’s decision to
allow the Sugar Kings to remain in Cuba garnered little fanfare in either daily.
Before the Verdi incident, Cuba again picked up steam in the Rochester press, but not via
baseball. While the Red Wings’s Havana connection provided local reporting opportunities for
the likes of the T-U’s Bill Ringle, the diamond’s role in prompting such opportunity was
drastically downplayed. While Ringle did publish a full-page article on the Cuban “fanáticos,” it
was the only one of his four subsequent columns relegated to the sports section. In fact, if
BULLET HITS VERDI had arrived too late to run on the D & C’s front page, the only Cuban-
centered article was Beahon’s full page expose that carried nary a single mention of baseball.
The Sugar Kings seemingly only provided a means to get local reporters on the Havana scene,
with the sport itself only a secondary importance.
The Verdi incident only served to inflame American-Cuban tensions on the front pages of
the Flower City press. The T-U pasted a full page photograph of Verdi’s bullet scarred ballcap
over an article which quoted IL representative after representative as being against returning
league play to Havana. The D & C, while running a front-page Beahon column which arguably
removed any intent/ill-will directed at the Americans during the incident, also featured numerous
editorials calling for the franchise to be relocated to the United States. In fact, a letter to Paul
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Pinckney, D & C sports editor, that was rerouted to Bobby Maduro, as well as the Sugar Kings
owner’s written response, only featured in the sports section.1 After the initial two to three days
of coverage, articles on Cuba focused solely away from the baseball diamond. While the
American-Cuban baseball bond may have prevented the Verdi incident from being taken out of
proportion, it did nothing to relieve the overall tensions between the two Western Hemisphere
nations.
By 1960, Rochester’s baseball window into the Cuban crisis was far from closed, yet was
not featured in the T-U and barely mentioned in the D & C. Even though Beahon ran three front
page columns because of his Red Wings assignment, only one of the articles mentioned baseball.
His first, a quotation of a game report covering the IL season opener, portrayed Castro and
Bonsal as being on opposing sides. He once again stressed that this division was only between
the two nation’s governments; however it was not the average Cuban Eisenhower needed to
appease. Beahon’s second article warned the Rochester readership that massive bloodshed
would be seen in Cuba’s near future as more and more Cubans turned against the Revolutionary
government. Beahon’s final front section column definitively labelled the island as having turned
into a Soviet satellite, a place where America was no longer welcome.
By the time the sugar quota debate arose in late June-early July, both Rochester dailies
inflamed tension amongst their readership with little regard for unity with Cuba. Baseball’s
presence in the crisis once again took a back seat, at least in the opening sections. The very
week Eisenhower virtually eliminated sugar purchases from Cuba, Havana was in town to play a
three-game series against the Red Wings. And yet, outside of the sports pages, this diamond
connection was either supressed or ignored by both dailies’ editors. In Beahon’s 3 July piece:
“In This Corner, the baseball writer proposed (see next page): 1 Paul Pinckney, “Maduro Replies to Rochesterian,” D & C, 22 August 1959.
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Shaughnessy and the league had ample anticipation of the current mess . . . Apparently, however what the U.S. government worries about does not work Frank Shaughnessy, who observes all of this from his sunny, third base field box in Montreal, Que. That’s exactly where Shaughnessy will be-in Montreal-when Toronto plays in Havana next July 26. Last year’s near-tragic shoot-em-up in Gran Stadium could be excused. There was absolutely no malice connected to this simple celebration . . . The Cubans are an emotional people. They are so emotional that next July 26 they may be taking an entirely different view of goings-on, even playful, between Cuban and American athletes. By that time, the Cuban sugar quota to the U.S. probably will have been slashed to the minimum. Because the U.S. finally is taking a different view of the situation in Cuba. Reducing the sugar quota could have one direct effect in Cuba. It could take bread from the mouths of Cuban babies. By that time, the hate-American campaign being directed and executed by Communists in Cuba could be getting through loud and clear. Perhaps not loud enough to be heard in Montreal. But acoustics in Gran Stadium are remarkable. Luck, and health, too, to the Toronto Maple Leafs.2
During this crisis, Beahon’s line of taking bread from Cuban children was one of only a
handful of sympathetic remarks in either daily, and it was buried away from the front page. So
while there may have indeed been the chance for a transnational cultural bond between Cuba and
the United States via baseball, it was effectively hidden within sports sections such as those at
the T-U and the D & C.
And when the IL finally forcibly relocated the Sugar Kings to Jersey City, outside of one
front page column in the D & C, there was little Rochester press recognition of how that which
had transpired impacted a cultural sporting bond between the United States and Cuba. Instead,
the two dailies focused their attention solely on Castro’s seemingly unending outbursts of anti-
American rhetoric. Not only did Gannett’s newspapers ignore baseball as a potential American-
Cuban bonding agent, the sport was further used to widen the gap between the Rochester
readership and their Havanan counterparts.
Most telling, however, was the word choice Beahon used in these articles. It was not the
IL’s baseball axe that fell on Cuba, nor was it MLB or even Organized Baseball. Quite simply, it
was just baseball. Beahon gave no credit to the CWL which was still alive on the island, nor the
2 George Beahon, “In This Corner,” D & C, 3 July, 1960.
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amateur game still hanging on. There was no talk of stickball games in the streets or pickup
contests in local parks. According to Beahon and the Rochester press, that all-American
institution of baseball would vanish from Cuba along with the capital’s Sugar Kings.
In summation, baseball had very little impact on Rochester’s evolving coverage of Cuba
from the Sugar King’s IL entrance in 1954 to their 1960 exit other than providing an additional
and unique lens through which to view the island’s revolution. The indifferent, to wary, to
negative tones taken by the T-U and D & C featured little to no baseball in the majority of
relevant articles. This diamond narrative was relegated away from the “real news” to the sports
section. As the American-Cuban baseball bond had primarily been nothing more than attempted
enforcement of U.S. political and social agendas, rather than trying to truly understand and
coexist with Cuban culture, it is far from surprising this was the case. The Rochester press felt
that baseball was nothing more than a footnote in American-Cuban relations, and the Havana
Sugar Kings-Red Wings connection did nothing to amend that sentiment.
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Bibliography Newspapers Democrat and Chronicle, April-October 1954-1960, November 1958-March 1959. Rochester Times Union, April-October 1954-1960, November 1958-March 1959. The Sporting News, January-December 1954-1960. The Buffalo Evening News, April-October 1954-1960, November 1958-March 1959. Palm Beach Post, September 1953. St. Petersburg Times, December 1953. Spencer Daily Reporter, October 1953. Ottawa Citizen, November 1953. Sarasota Herald-Tribune, November 1953. Miami News, January 1954. Daytona Beach Morning Journal, August 1954. Toronto Daily Star, April 1959. Montreal Gazette, January 1934.
Books Alexander, Robert J. A History of Organized Labor in Cuba. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 2002. Baldassaro, Lawrence and Richard A. Johnson ed. The American Game: Baseball and Ethnicity. Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press, 2002. Bjarkman, Peter C. A History of Cuban Baseball: 1864-2006. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2007. Bonachea, Ramón L. and Marta San Martín. The Cuban Insurrection: 1952-1959. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Books, 1974. Brennan, Bonnie. For The Record: An Oral History of Rochester, NY Newsworkers. New York: Fordham University Press, 2001. Briley, Ron ed. The Politics of Baseball: Essays on the Pastime and Power at Home and Abroad. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2010. Burgos Jr., Adrian. Playing America’s Game: Baseball, Latinos, and the Color Line. Berkley: University of California Press, 2007. Carter, Thomas F. The Quality of Home Runs: The Passion, Politics, and Language of Cuban Baseball. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2008. Castro, Fidel with Ignacio Ramonet. My Life. London: Simon & Schuster Export, 2007. Echevarría, Roberto Gonzalez. Cuban Fiestas. New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press, 2010. Echevarría, Roberto Gonzalez. The Pride of Havana: A History of Cuban Baseball. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. Elias, Robert. The Empire Strikes Out: How Baseball Sold U.S. Foreign Policy and Promoted the American Way Abroad. New York: New Press, 2010. Fainaru, Steve and Ray Sanchez. The Duke of Havana: Baseball, Communism, and the Search for the American Dream. New York: Villard Books, 2001. Gerling, G. Curtis. Smugtown, U.S.A. Webster, N.Y.: Plaza Publishers, 1957. Guest, Greg. Applied Thematic Analysis. Thousand Oaks: Sage, 2012. Herrera, Andrea O’Reilly ed. Cuba: Idea of a Nation Displaced. Albany, N.Y.: SUNY Press, 2008.
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Jamail, Milton H. Full Count: Inside Cuban Baseball. Carbondale, Ill: Southern Illinois University Press, 2000. Johnson, Lloyd and Miles Wolff. The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball: The Official Record of Minor League Baseball; 1st Edition. Durham, N.C.: Baseball America, Inc., 1993. Lerner, Michael A. Dry Manhattan: Prohibition in New York City. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2007. Mandelaro, Jim and Scott Pitoniak. Silver Seasons and a New Frontier: The Story of the Rochester Red Wings. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 2010. McKelvey, Blake. Rochester: An Emerging Metropolis, 1925-1961. Rochester, N.Y.: Christopher Press, 1961. McKelvey, Blake. Rochester on the Genesee: The Growth of a City. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press,1973. Paterson, Thomas G. Paterson. Contesting Castro: The United States and the Triumph of the Cuban Revolution. New York: Oxford University Press, 1994. Pérez Jr., Louis A. On Becoming Cuban: Identity, Nationality, and Culture. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999. Pettavino, Paula J. and Geralyn Pye. Sport in Cuba: The Diamond in the Rough. Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh University Press, 1994. Price, S.L. Pitching Around Fidel: A Journey into the Heart of Cuban Sports. New York: Ecco Press, 2000. Scheer, Robert and Maurice Zeitlin. Cuba, Tragedy in Our Hemisphere. New York: Grove Press, 1963. Schoultz, Lars. That Infernal Little Cuban Republic. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2009. Senzel, Howard. Baseball and the Cold War: Being a Soliloquy on the Necessity of Baseball. New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1977. Snyder, Brad. Beyond the Shadow of the Senators: The Untold Story of the Homestead Grays and the Integration of Baseball. Chicago: Contemporary Books, 2003. Virtue, John. South of the Color Barrier: How Jorge Pasquel and the Mexican League Pushed Baseball Towards Integration. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland & Company, 2007.
Chapters in Edited Books Crawford, Russ. “The Nationalist Pastime: The Use of Baseball to promote Nationalism Globally.” in The Politics of Baseball: Essays on the Pastime and Power at Home and Abroad, ed. Ron Briley. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland, 2010. Regalado, Samuel O. “The Latin Quarter in the Major Leagues: Adjustments and Achievement.” in The American Game: Baseball and Ethnicity, ed. Lawrence Baldassaro and Richard A. Johnson.
Academic Journal Articles Doherty, Kyle T. “The Cause of Baseball: Baseball and Nation-Building in Revolutionary Cuba.” Nine: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, Vol. 21, No. 1 (2012): 53-68. Gems, Gerald R. “Sport, Colonialism, and United States Imperialism.” Journal of Sports History, Vol. 33, No. 1 (2006): 3-25.
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Lynch, Andrew. “Expressions of Cultural Standing in Miami: Cuban Spanish Discourse about Fidel Castro and Cuba.” Revista Internacional de Lenguistica Iberoamericana, Vol. 7, No. 2 (2009): 21-48. Saco, Diana and Jutta Weldes. “Making State Action Possible: The United States and the Discursive Construction of the ‘Cuban Problem,’ 1960-1994.” Millennium: Journal of International Studies, Vol. 25, No. 2 (1996): 361-395. Thomas, Hugh. “Cuba: The United States and Batista, 1952-1958.” World Affairs, Vol. 159, No. 4 (1987): 169-175. Turner, Justin W.R. “1970’s Baseball Diplomacy between Cuba and the United States.” Nine: A Journal of Baseball History and Culture, Vol. 19, No. 1 (2010): 67-84. Speeches Voight, David Q. Reflections on Diamonds: American Baseball and American Culture, speech at the 1st annual Convention for North American Society for Sports History, Columbus, OH, May 25-26, 1973. Research Papers Nagel, Evan. “They Should Have Their Heads Examined: How The Democrat and Chronicle Repackaged & Resold Rochester, New York on Minor League Hockey.” Independent Research Study, Western University, 2013. Documentaries Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: Our Game. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: Something like a War. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: The Faith of Fifty Million People. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: A National Heirloom. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: Shadow Ball. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: The National Pastime. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: The Capital of Baseball. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: Our Game. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: A Whole New Ballgame. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. Baseball: Home. Narr. John Chancellor. PBS, 1994, Netflix. Burns, Ken dir. The Tenth Inning. Narr. Keith David. PBS, 2007, Netflix.
Websites www.baseball-reference.com www.beisbol.cu www.mlb.com www.sabr.org www.vitral.org
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